Eyes Forward: Creating our Narratives: April Bey, Michael Chukes, Loren Holland and Tim Washington

Eyes Forward: Creating our Narratives

 

April Bey

Michael Chukes

Loren Holland

Tim Washington

 

March 1-March 18, 2020

Opening Reception March 1st. 5-8pm

“Eyes Forward: Creating our Narratives,” an art exhibition featuring four contemporary African American artists, will open as part of ArtHop at  M Street Graduate Studios  from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday, March 1. The exhibition and will run through March 18.
 
“Eyes Forward” artists include the sculptural work of Michael Chukes and Tim Washington, as well the multimedia works of April Bey and Loren Holland. These powerful and varied artists speak to the importance of personal agency and the construction of cultural narratives.
 
Holland and Chukes will be part of an artist lecture and panel moderated by Dr. Keith Jordan from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Thursday, March 1, in  Conley Art 101 . Although the four artists have diverse backgrounds, interests, and life experiences, their
narratives intersect on themes related to race, class, social and gender issues.  In “Eyes Forward,” the viewer is invited to contemplate the artists’ disenchantment with the current social establishment, as well as their altruistic vision for a more harmonious future, said Cindy Urrutia, director for the Center for Creativity and the Arts at Fresno State.
 
“Eyes Forward” was originally conceptualized and co-curated by James Panozzo, founder and executive director of  Launch LA , and Mar Hollingsworth, program manager and visual arts curator with the  California African American Museum .  “Eyes Forward” debuted at the Los Angeles Art Show in January 2018 and consisted of 10 contemporary artists of color living and working in Los Angeles.
 
The exhibition traveling to Fresno is a smaller selection of works than that of the original “Eyes Forward” Los Angeles debut.  While smaller, the “Eyes Forward” works traveling to Fresno are provocative and thought-provoking, Urrutia said.
“Eyes Forward” is being sponsored by the  Center for Creativity and the Arts , the  Department of Art and Design  and the  Black Faculty and Staff Association .
The Center for Creativity and the Arts serves a hub for arts in which artists from a variety of backgrounds can work to stimulate public engagement through inquiry, discussion and understanding. The theme for this year’s programming is “Voice and Silence.”