Letitia Huckaby, Ms. Angela and the Baby |
Cassilhaus, hidden at the edge of town on a drive that eventually gravels
into a wildlife\cattle guard and wildflower garden, and then backs into a
forest, is the home of a couple who are such advocates for the art of
photography that they have designed their beautifully open house to hold
exhibits and lectures, as well as working space for interns and resident
photographers.
I mention this first because the house of Ellen Cassilly (its talented
architect) and Frank Konhaus (its enthusiastic organizer) is not only a great
opening to the collected work of friends and strangers alike, but also a
drawing room of inspiration.
A week ago, brilliance came in leaps and bounds at the talk by artist Letitia Huckaby, who has, among other endeavors, been printing photographed silhouettes on vintage textiles.
Her work, often framed in embroidery hoops, is storied with the history of her
family...their origins in Greenwood, Mississippi, in a little Louisiana town
north of Baton Rouge, and now outside of Fort Worth where her husband's people
come from and where she lives with her family. It's also a testament to
the lives, current and disappeared, of African-American communities, and the
people whose spirits she allows us to find there still.
Place, for Letitia Huckaby, is as much a character as the faces born anew on her collected old cottons. Reality shows through in spots where the fabric (like that of life), is worn and thin. Seeing her work through her eyes reminded me right away of the character that Place becomes in Miss Welty's fiction and memoirs...she who spent a portion of her life photographing the South for the Works Progress Administration in the dire times of the 1930's.
Brought up in Germany, where her father was a commander of a U.S. base, Letitia's African-American heritage was pretty much taken for granted, and, as she noted a few times, protected. But once grown and studying in Boston, the still-simmering northern vein of xenophobia was an eye-opening experience for her. In art school, though she learned the rules of traditional photography, Letitia's work slowly turned toward the places the generations before her inhabited, geographically and culturally.
Instilling that history in her vision, she found materials that not only reflected, but became, the work she leads us to envision. It is so easy to open to the stories she tells through her camera, through her eyes, and her ancestors' and cultures' eyes; for me, in fact, a lot of the places of her work are ones I've lived in and journeyed through.
San Antonio, first, where
the McNay, one of my favorite museums, gave her space and time to build an
installation, as part of their larger project, Limitless! Five
Women Shape Contemporary Art, and then to her delight bought her
installation to keep; Greenwood, which Jake and I explored intently and stayed
several times on our way up and down the Natchez Trace, crossing back and forth
the bridge dividing life there; Louisiana, along Route 191 and the towns around
it, land we found fraught with the thickness of long and difficult and
interconnected history. Tulsa, the echoes of Greenwood where migration brought
a whole community to live, and now would be lost, except for Letitia Huckaby's
work.
But she was here in Chapel Hill now, and luck had it that I came face to face
with her. I'd first met her, a quick moment a few weeks before, at the
"Draw or Die" film preview about Minnie Evans, the Wilmington, North
Carolina artist who was self-taught and only lately honored.
But it was at Cassilhaus that Letitia and the stuff of her art sparked my visions: fabric, needlework, the bones of old houses and the lives they engendered, the stories that are behind and ahead of us...all that taken up by a photographer who chose to use the implements of women's crafts to project her art. It is no secret that those are also the things that inspire what I do (though, I humbly admit, in far less impressive ways as hers). I was struck by the way she went further with our tools...framing her silhouettes in needlework hoops... imagine! I stood in rapt attention at all she talked about and showed us that night.
She was, as you can
imagine, busy with people's questions afterward, so instead of keeping her
standing longer I just introduced myself quickly and asked her to come for
lunch another day. And graciously, she accepted.
A few days later, on my porch, the fan whishing away the heat, we talked for a few hours about her life, her journey into the fascinating art she does now, and her ideas for the future...old handkerchiefs, she's thinking, will be a perfect material for her work. Like Letitia, I've collected them from family or old-thing shops. I can't wait to see what she makes of them.
We talked about the wider
culture, too...her son going off to college now ("any school that ends in
'Tech'", she laughs...he's into robotics and engineering), away from the
protection she and her husband (a painter whose work has, over the years,
crisscrossed with hers in theme and vision), have in their turn afforded their
children. It worries her. It reminded me of a friend's conversation
recently, worried the same way about her grandson when he's older, the dangers
of racial ignorance brought to bear on the young. That, too, echoes
through her subjects.
It has left me
wondering...is there hope, a way to inspire hope for openness
among us? Does art like Letitia's...like anyone's...have the potential to
change our children's lives for the better? Though she didn't mention it
at the time, on her website I found another connection...Miss Huckaby, I read,
is co-founder of Kinfolk House, a 100-year-old house for artists of black and
Latina heritage in Fort Worth...women who work together to influence a broader,
more accepting vision of art.
Looking around at some of my work before she left, she shared
possibilities..."Why not try this on bamboo," she said of one of my
fabric hangings. Easy to do, I told her. We happen to have a small
forest of it in the dips of wood around the corner, and Alexander loves
chopping into it for his own arts. Letitia had been surprised, she told me,
that so much bamboo grew in these parts...it's not native...how did it end up
here? How does anybody and anything end up anywhere? There are so
many journeys, intended and not.
But back to those handkerchiefs...all the old ones I keep in coat pockets and purses...and stacks of linens in drawers. I'm not a photographer, but mono-printing on them, or transfering, or sewing on pieces of wood or clay or found metal, and inscribing, somehow, words that tell real stories...
You see what I mean. Not only her talk, but our lunch was an experience
open and opening, humor and sorrow woven through it. Among women, sharing
visions in art across any genre or age or culture is an
opening...a woman's eyes seeing, a woman's skills and choices of material and
ways of doing, no shadow of the old guard between to interfere.
Speaking of that, it had
bothered me that at that Ackland presentation of the Minnie Evans film-to-be,
it was Ms. Evans' great-grandson who was asked to join the panel
discussion, while her great-granddaughter, Beverly, sat in the audience.
Ironically, more than once, he had to call on her to remember family stories,
family arts, who-was-who. "She's the one who keeps all that,"
he laughed. Someday, I'm going to have to have lunch with Beverly Evans,
too. For the real story.
I hope Letitia Huckaby and
I can keep in touch, but meanwhile, her waves of art are pushing my own small
efforts to welcome shores.
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