8/2018
On 8/15/2018, The Baltimore Sun posted an Op-Ed that I had written examining the controversy surrounding the removal of four confederate-era monuments, and the inability to adequately commentate Baltimore native, Harriet Tubman. Given the word limit for the Op-Ed, I will provide a bit of context here.
I first wrote about a series of murals created by Mike Alewitz on the life of Harriet Tubman back in 2005 for a graduate course. During that time, I spoke to the artist over the phone as well as the other key figures involved in the project. You can read about the controversy surrounding Alewitz's design here.
Fast forward 17+ years; many cities in America began to question the value of Confederate-era monuments and memorials. Baltimore was not immune to this spotlight. And so, in the middle of the night in August of 2017, the mayor ordered four monuments to be removed. In an effort to ease this transition - out with the old, in with the new - the city opened a submission process for artists to propose design ideas for monuments that represented a more inclusive history. While this initiative opened the doors for exciting possibilities, the city's first response (just 6 months following the removal of the monuments) was a lackluster alternative; a grove of trees renamed in honor of Harriet Tubman.
I presented on this topic at the International Society for Education Through Art's (InSEA) annual congress in Finland in June, 2018. Immediately following my presentation, I went back to my hotel room and wrote the Op-Ed piece that I would then submit a few weeks later to the Baltimore Sun.
I first wrote about a series of murals created by Mike Alewitz on the life of Harriet Tubman back in 2005 for a graduate course. During that time, I spoke to the artist over the phone as well as the other key figures involved in the project. You can read about the controversy surrounding Alewitz's design here.
Fast forward 17+ years; many cities in America began to question the value of Confederate-era monuments and memorials. Baltimore was not immune to this spotlight. And so, in the middle of the night in August of 2017, the mayor ordered four monuments to be removed. In an effort to ease this transition - out with the old, in with the new - the city opened a submission process for artists to propose design ideas for monuments that represented a more inclusive history. While this initiative opened the doors for exciting possibilities, the city's first response (just 6 months following the removal of the monuments) was a lackluster alternative; a grove of trees renamed in honor of Harriet Tubman.
I presented on this topic at the International Society for Education Through Art's (InSEA) annual congress in Finland in June, 2018. Immediately following my presentation, I went back to my hotel room and wrote the Op-Ed piece that I would then submit a few weeks later to the Baltimore Sun.
Posted in The Baltimore Sun on 8/15/2018 :
Baltimore removed its Confederate monuments a year ago, so what's changed?
As we approach the one-year anniversary of the removal of four monuments here in Baltimore, I am left with a nagging question; are we any closer to solving the dilemma of how we recognize important historical figures, one that is different than the pervasive white male, figurative representations that dominate America’s landscape?
In March of this year, after the removal of the Lee and Jackson monument, Baltimore City public officials came up with a “solution” for this specific site. A tree-lined area close to where the monument once stood was renamed, “Harriet Tubman Grove”. While the road to get to this place in time was certainly paved with good intentions, the absence of Harriet Tubman as a figurative depiction is a troubled compromise. Not to mention, there is a dramatic irony and unfortunate symbolism associated with the history of black slavery and trees, which were often used for lynching.
Some may recall that Baltimore tried to honor Harriet Tubman in a public space years ago, but criticism of the artist’s depiction – Harriet holding a musket – kept the design from finding a permanent home.
In 2000, muralist Mike Alewitz was commissioned by Baltimore Clayworks to paint a series of murals around Maryland honoring the life of Harriet Tubman. The first in the series was a mural painted on a freestanding wall and placed at her birthplace in Cambridge, Maryland. The second, a mural painted indoors at the University of Maryland’s Eastern Shore campus, depicted Harriet Tubman and fellow abolitionist and Maryland native, Fredrick Douglas. The third mural in the series was painted on an outside wall at Magnolia Middle School in Harford County. During the construction of this mural, it fell victim to overnight vandalism with spray-painted racial slurs and symbols.
The final design in the series was to culminate with a mural to be painted on an outside wall of the Associated Black Charities (ABC) in downtown Baltimore. The ABC declined to have the mural painted due to its depiction of Harriet Tubman with a musket in her hand, and the appropriateness of displaying a gun in art, in a city that sees roughly 300 murders a year. While the ABC had a right to decline the mural it was an interesting position to take considering the number of historical monuments and memorials in cities around the country that depict white men, with guns or swords.
At the time, Mayor Martin O'Malley jumped into the newsworthy controversy and stated that he would find a home for the Harriet Tubman mural. The design was displayed on a large canvas at Artscape that summer, but it never found a permanent space on a public wall in Baltimore. How does a free mural funded by reputable Arts programs not find a home in a city's public space?
Fast forward to 2018 and we are faced with the same problem; the need to depict historical events within a homogenous context, void of realistic, figurative representations outside the non-white, non-male canon. Within this realm, society would rather recognize a person for their name rather than use a historically accurate image, e.g., roads, buildings and now, a grove of trees. Harriet Tubman and others like her are worth more than just a symbolic association to an area of trees.
Removing confederate-era monuments completely is a form of censorship and most proponents of art would agree that this is contagious. Similarly, this was the case when Mike Alewitz was asked to alter his Tubman design and substitute Harriet’s musket for a staff, before it was declined altogether.
One plausible alternative would be to install new works of art in proximity of existing ones. Or, alter the existing structures, outside of vandalism, to allow the viewer to draw new meaning from these moments in history. A monument of Harriet Tubman next to confederate general Robert E Lee would create new narratives, while challenging old ones.
According to statements made by Mayor Catherine Pugh the cost of removing the four monuments, which now sit in storage, is close to $20,000. I wonder….how much does a free mural cost these days?
Note: I have corresponded with the artist, Mike Alewitz, multiple times since his residency; in 2005 and in the past year. During each of those communications I posed the question whether or not he would return to Baltimore to paint his final design. On each occasion, his response was “yes”.
Baltimore removed its Confederate monuments a year ago, so what's changed?
As we approach the one-year anniversary of the removal of four monuments here in Baltimore, I am left with a nagging question; are we any closer to solving the dilemma of how we recognize important historical figures, one that is different than the pervasive white male, figurative representations that dominate America’s landscape?
In March of this year, after the removal of the Lee and Jackson monument, Baltimore City public officials came up with a “solution” for this specific site. A tree-lined area close to where the monument once stood was renamed, “Harriet Tubman Grove”. While the road to get to this place in time was certainly paved with good intentions, the absence of Harriet Tubman as a figurative depiction is a troubled compromise. Not to mention, there is a dramatic irony and unfortunate symbolism associated with the history of black slavery and trees, which were often used for lynching.
Some may recall that Baltimore tried to honor Harriet Tubman in a public space years ago, but criticism of the artist’s depiction – Harriet holding a musket – kept the design from finding a permanent home.
In 2000, muralist Mike Alewitz was commissioned by Baltimore Clayworks to paint a series of murals around Maryland honoring the life of Harriet Tubman. The first in the series was a mural painted on a freestanding wall and placed at her birthplace in Cambridge, Maryland. The second, a mural painted indoors at the University of Maryland’s Eastern Shore campus, depicted Harriet Tubman and fellow abolitionist and Maryland native, Fredrick Douglas. The third mural in the series was painted on an outside wall at Magnolia Middle School in Harford County. During the construction of this mural, it fell victim to overnight vandalism with spray-painted racial slurs and symbols.
The final design in the series was to culminate with a mural to be painted on an outside wall of the Associated Black Charities (ABC) in downtown Baltimore. The ABC declined to have the mural painted due to its depiction of Harriet Tubman with a musket in her hand, and the appropriateness of displaying a gun in art, in a city that sees roughly 300 murders a year. While the ABC had a right to decline the mural it was an interesting position to take considering the number of historical monuments and memorials in cities around the country that depict white men, with guns or swords.
At the time, Mayor Martin O'Malley jumped into the newsworthy controversy and stated that he would find a home for the Harriet Tubman mural. The design was displayed on a large canvas at Artscape that summer, but it never found a permanent space on a public wall in Baltimore. How does a free mural funded by reputable Arts programs not find a home in a city's public space?
Fast forward to 2018 and we are faced with the same problem; the need to depict historical events within a homogenous context, void of realistic, figurative representations outside the non-white, non-male canon. Within this realm, society would rather recognize a person for their name rather than use a historically accurate image, e.g., roads, buildings and now, a grove of trees. Harriet Tubman and others like her are worth more than just a symbolic association to an area of trees.
Removing confederate-era monuments completely is a form of censorship and most proponents of art would agree that this is contagious. Similarly, this was the case when Mike Alewitz was asked to alter his Tubman design and substitute Harriet’s musket for a staff, before it was declined altogether.
One plausible alternative would be to install new works of art in proximity of existing ones. Or, alter the existing structures, outside of vandalism, to allow the viewer to draw new meaning from these moments in history. A monument of Harriet Tubman next to confederate general Robert E Lee would create new narratives, while challenging old ones.
According to statements made by Mayor Catherine Pugh the cost of removing the four monuments, which now sit in storage, is close to $20,000. I wonder….how much does a free mural cost these days?
Note: I have corresponded with the artist, Mike Alewitz, multiple times since his residency; in 2005 and in the past year. During each of those communications I posed the question whether or not he would return to Baltimore to paint his final design. On each occasion, his response was “yes”.