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In 1992 Bill Duke teamed up with Laurence Fishburne and Jeff Goldblum to create one of the best film noirs ever made and a masterpiece of Black cinema. Walter Greason and Tim Fielder join in to talk about it, the rise of hip hop, and the early 90s. About our guests:A native of Mississippi, Tim Fielder is an illustrator, cartoonist, animator and OG Afrofuturist. He is the founder of Dieselfunk Studios, an intermedia storytelling company, and is an educator for institutions such as the New York Film Academy and Howard University. Tim has served clients such as Marvel, Tri-Star Pictures, Ubisoft Entertainment, and the Village Voice, and is known for his TEDx Talk on Afrofuturism. He won the prestigious 2018 Glyph Award, and his work has been showcased in the Hammonds House Museum, Exit Art and NYU Gallatin Gallery. He attended Jackson State University, School of Visual Arts, and New York University. He lives in New York City.Walter Greason teaches American and world history, using media ecology, economics, and African diaspora studies. His areas of research include urban planning, Afrofuturism, and multimedia user experience design. He is an author, editor, and contributor to more than twenty books, mostly notably the award-winning books Suburban Erasure and The Black Reparations Project. His work on the Timothy Thomas Fortune Cultural Center has garnered international acclaim for the innovative use of digital technology, leading to multiple urban revitalization projects in Minnesota, Florida, New Jersey, and Louisiana. He has written for or appeared as the feature guest on media outlets ranging from the Washington Post, USA Today, the Canadian Broadcast Channel, the Philadelphia Daily News, the Huffington Post, National Public Radio, Historians at the Movies, the New York Times Read Along, WURD Philadelphia, and Today with Dr. Kaye (WEEA, Baltimore). He was a Future Faculty Fellow at Temple University where he completed his Ph.D. in History and a Presidential Scholar at Villanova University where he studied History, English, Philosophy, Peace and Justice Studies, and Africana Studies. His most recent project, The Graphic History of Hip Hop, with Afrofuturist illustrator Tim Fielder, has been featured at the United Nations, the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum for African American History and Culture, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the Schomburg Center in the New York Public Library system, and San Diego Comic-Con in 2024.
Halima Taha, the curator of the Hammonds House Museum, discusses the new John Rhoden Sculpture Garden. Plus, the design team of Esrawe and Cadena details “Los Trompos,” the new interactive installation at Woodruff Park, and we hear about the Southern Arts Relief Fund.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of Go Gaddis Real Estate Radio, brought to you by Modern Traditions Realty Group, we provide the latest Metro Atlanta real estate updates, highlight a significant grant received by the Hammonds House Museum, and delve into the quirky science of how your bed side preference might reflect your personality. Show Teaser Topics: Metro Atlanta Real Estate Update for the Last 7 Days Something You Should Know About Atlanta: Hammonds House Museum Receives $100K Grant Which Side of the Bed Do You Sleep On? Discover What It Says About You Cleve Gaddis: Join Cleve Gaddis as he helps listeners transform from real estate novices to experts, ensuring that home selling and buying can be done with total confidence and without the usual worries of life's biggest investments. Let's Talk: Visit GoGaddisRadio.com to ask questions, leave comments, push back, share your ideas, and explore our Neighborhood Spotlight. Don't forget to subscribe to our podcast! Metro Atlanta Real Estate Update: Stay informed with the latest trends and data from the Metro Atlanta real estate market over the past week, helping you make informed decisions. Hammonds House Museum: Learn about the exciting news that the Hammonds House Museum has received a $100K grant, enhancing its cultural and historical contributions to Atlanta. Bed Side and Personality: Does the side of the bed you sleep on say something about your personality? We'll explore this intriguing topic based on research from Sleepopolis. Listener Question: Melanie and Graham from Johns Creek wonder if there's a reason behind their chosen sides of the bed. Cleve discusses research and insights into this fascinating topic. Join us for an engaging and informative episode that keeps you updated on real estate trends, celebrates local achievements, and uncovers surprising facts about everyday habits. If you have a question for Cleve, click here : https://gogaddisradio.com/ask-a-question If you are looking to buy or sell your home with Cleve, click here : https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/contact If you are looking to join a real estate team, click here : https://moderntraditionsrealty.net/careers
Playwright Derek Goldman and actor Andrew Benator discuss “Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski” on stage at Theatrical Outfit through February 18. Plus, poet Jill Spisak takes the spotlight for our series, “Speaking of Poetry,” and we hear about Halima Taha, the new artistic chair for Hammonds House Museum.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Kevin Sipp, co-curator of “Foundations and Futures,” discusses the exhibition, which celebrates the 35th anniversary of Hammonds House Museum. Plus, Alon Balshan, owner of Alon's Bakery, shares some of his favorite Chanukah foods.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
If there ever was an artist that wasn't scared to say what needed to be said, it's Dawn Williams Boyd. Whether it is issues of gun violence, abortion, or voting rights, she will make sure she shares her feelings about it in her wonderful cloth paintings. We talk to Dawn about her recent exhibition, Tip of the Iceberg at Fort Gavsenvoort in New York, and some of the issues she's covered in the show. We talk about how she makes her complex compositions, sources her fabrics, and the power of doing work that makes people uncomfortable sometimes. Her cloth paintings are powerful, and we talk all about it today on the Noize! Listen, subscribe, and share!Episode 170 topics include:using different mediumsdoing work about current eventssourcing fabrics and materialsThe Tip of the Iceberg show at Fort Gansevoort Gallerysaying things that need to be saidcontinuing to learn historythe process of putting together Dawn's work revising work in processthe necessity of saying somethingtackling new subjectsDawn Williams Boyd was born in 1952 in Neptune, New Jersey. She earned her BFA at Stephens College, Columbia, MO in 1974. She has exhibited her works at Wofford College, Spartanburg, SC; Southwest Art Center, Atlanta, GA; Hammonds House Museum, Atlanta, GA; Bulloch Hall, Roswell, GA; Agnes Scott College, Decatur, GA; Callanwolde Fine Arts Center, Atlanta, GA; and Contemporary Craft, Pittsburgh, PA. Her work is included in the collections of The Columbus Museum in Columbus, GA and the Richardson Family Art Museum at Wofford College in Spartanburg, SC.See more: www.dawnwilliamsboyd.com + https://www.fortgansevoort.com/artists/dawn-williams-boyd/selected-worksPresented by: Black Art In AmericaFollow us:StudioNoizePodcast.comIG: @studionoizepodcastJamaal Barber: @JBarberStudioSupport the podcast www.patreon.com/studionoizepodcast
MJQ Concourse co-owners Ryan Purcell and Murphy discuss the dance club's move to the iconic Underground space previously occupied by Dante's Down the Hatch. Plus, photographer Tokie Rome-Taylor details her new exhibition, “Insight: the Body as Artifact, Archive, and Memory,” on view now at the Hammonds House Museum. And our series highlighting local comedians, “Speaking of Comedy,” features Mike Schatz.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Welcome to part 2 of our "Black Women in the Arts" podcast series. Leatrice shares her story of life through the arts. Leatrice Ellzy is a seasoned arts leader, curator, producer, thinker, and fan of disruption. She is currently the Sr. Director of Programming at the Apollo Theater where she serves as a primary steward of Apollo's artistic vision and helps shape the strategic program direction of one of New York City's most vital performing arts centers, and one of the world's most recognized and celebrated artistic brands. Her unique skill set has developed over 32 years of experience in nonprofit management and development, broadcast, media relations, arts presenting & technology. Her arts management and administration experience developed through work at Woodruff Arts Center and the National Black Arts Festival (NBAF). She produced for NBAF from 2002-2005. In 2005 she was hired to manage the organization's artistic programming and later became the organization's 5th Artistic Director. Prior to joining the Apollo staff, she served as Executive Director of Atlanta's Hammonds House Museum where she was charged with reimagining the organization for the 21st century in terms of strategies for institutional sustainability and artistic focus. Leatrice is active in the field, serving on panels, and advisory committees and participating in conversations about the state of the arts nationally, regionally, and locally. Her past and present professional affiliations include the Association of Performing Arts Presenters, Fractured Atlas, Women of Color in the Arts, the Contemporary African Arts Consortium, C4 Atlanta, Idea Capital, Fulton County Arts Council, LANE National Advisory Committee, and the National Performance Network Board of Directors. Learn more about the Apollo Theater https://www.apollotheater.org/Enjoy and take a moment to share this with your tribe. Our stories are inspiring and deserve to her heard. Peace and Love, Monica Wisdom, Host, Black Women Amplified Podia is an all in one platform. Everything you need to sell courses, webinars, downloads, and community. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Thank you for listening! Please share with your tribe and leave us a great review. Appreciate it!Join our waitlist for the Power Story Formula. An incredible course designed to help you choose, build and monetize an impactful story. www.monicawisdomHQ.com to sign up. Join our private community. Women EmergedEnjoy your day, Monica Wisdom
Tim Fielder is an Illustrator, concept designer, cartoonist, and animator born in Tupelo, Mississippi, and raised in Clarksdale, Mississippi. He has a lifelong love of Visual Afrofutuism, Pulp entertainment, and action films. He holds other Afrofuturists such as Samuel R Delany, Octavia Butler, Pedro Bell, and Overton Lloyd as major influences.Tim has worked over the years in the storyboarding, film visual development, gaming, comics, and animation industries for clients as varied as Marvel Comics (‘Dr Dre: Man With A Cold Cold Heart'), The Village Voice, Tri-Star Pictures (‘The Mothership Connection'), to Ubisoft Entertainment (‘Batman: Vengeance).He is known for his graphic novel Matty's Rocket and his TEDx Talk and BLACK ENTERPRISE interview on the subject of Afrofuturism.His projects, Matty's Rocket, INFINITUM, Black Metropolis and High John Conqueror are graphic stories from his company Dieselfunk Studios.Most recently, his work was showcased in a career retrospective exhibition at The Hammonds House Museum. The show was titled Black Metropolis: 30 Years of Afrofuturism, Comics, Music, Animation, Decapitated Chickens, Heroes, Villains, and Negroes. Very soon Tim will be devoting time the the book variant of Black Metropolis which will be his Memoirs.He has also worked as an educator for institutions such as New York University, The School of Visual Arts, New York Film Academy and Howard University in the areas of digital animation, concept design, and illustration. Tim has also been an independent animator on his work-in-progress animated film, ‘Harbinger'.Tim, is an accomplished portrait artist. For decades he has produced illustrations of people from all walks of life from regular folks in the community to Presidents and celebrities. Along with his twin brother Jim, created the art form called Glogging, which showcases his portraits and is implemented in their Youtube and upcoming streaming program called THE DIESELFUNK SHOW.Due to his years as an instructor, Tim is also well versed and incredibly well-spoken in media and news environments making him ideal for marketing and promotional initiatives. Of particular note is his ability to energetically work with large groups of kids during workshops, as well as actively engaging on book tours to promote his projects.Tim hopes to push forward with his art in the emerging digital content delivery systems of the day. Dieselfunk Studios is a multimedia company that specializes in narrative stories told in sequential, app, and virtual formats. We strive to move the form forward in traditional and emerging markets.The artist makes his home with his wife and empty nest in the rapidly gentrifying neighborhood of Harlem.The Truth In This ArtThe Truth In This Art is a podcast interview series supporting vibrancy and development of Baltimore & beyond's arts and culture. Mentioned in this episode:Dieselfunk Studios To find more amazing stories from the artist and entrepreneurial scenes in & around Baltimore, check out my episode directory. Stay in TouchNewsletter sign-upSupport my podcastShareable link to episode ★ Support this podcast ★
Former NBA All-Star, author, and artist Joe Barry Carroll and Hammonds House Museum curator Leatrice Ellzy tell us about Barry's new exhibition, “My View From 7 Feet.” Plus, whimsical fine art photographer Julie Blackmon on her recent work at the Jackson Fine Art Gallery. And our series, “Speaking of Music,” features the Atlanta band Grand Vapids.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Ep.114 features Dawn Williams Boyd, She was born in 1952 in Neptune, New Jersey. She earned her BFA at Stephens College in Columbia, MO in 1974. The artist's self-described “cloth paintings” masterfully reinterpret the traditional craft of quilt-making in a contemporary context. Working on a monumental scale, Boyd employs a collage-like technique, stitching together scraps of fabric into intricate compositions. Utilizing art historical references, current events, and religious tropes as narrative frameworks, her cloth paintings chronicle seminal moments in African American history and quotidian scenes of Black American life. Inventively combining textures and patterns, Boyd's compositions weave together history and allegory to create multivalent meanings from disparate sources. Boyd's work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, NY; Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, AL; Birmingham Museum of Art in Birmingham, AL; Columbus Museum in Columbus, GA; Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse, NY; and the Richardson Family Art Museum at Wofford College in Spartanburg, SC. Her art has been exhibited at Wofford College in Spartanburg, SC; Southwest Art Center in Atlanta, GA; Hammonds House Museum in Atlanta, GA; Bulloch Hall in Roswell, GA; Agnes Scott College in Decatur, GA; Callanwolde Fine Arts Center in Atlanta, GA; and Contemporary Craft in Pittsburgh, PA. A multi-venue solo exhibition of the artist's work, Dawn Williams Boyd: Woe, was recently on view at the Lamar Dodd School of Art's Dodd Galleries, at the University of Georgia and at the Everson Museum in Syracuse, NY and will be on view at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, NY in September 2022. Photo Credit: Ron Witherspoon Artist https://www.dawnwilliamsboyd.com/ Fort Gansevoort Gallery https://www.fortgansevoort.com/ Sarah Lawrence https://www.sarahlawrence.edu/news-events/galleries/heimbold-gallery/on-exhibit.html Everson Museum of Art https://everson.org/connect/virtual-talk-with-dawn-williams-boyd-ben-green/ Daily Orange https://dailyorange.com/2022/02/dawn-williams-boyds-exhibit-woe-crafts-fiber-art-timeless-historical-portrayals/ Atlanta Magazine https://www.atlantamagazine.com/news-culture-articles/dawn-williams-boyds-cloth-paintings-tell-stories-of-black-life-in-america/ Ocula https://ocula.com/artists/dawn-williams-boyd/exhibitions/ Metal Magazine https://metalmagazine.eu/en/post/interview/dawn-williams-boyd Elephant Art https://elephant.art/dawn-williams-boyd-faith-ringgold-inspired-me-to-change-my-art/
FBI investigating bomb threats to HBCUs as hate crimes; Georgia voucher legislation would pay $6,000 toward K-12 tuition; Federal money will help repair Georgia bridges; Atlanta's Hammonds House Museum in turmoil
FBI investigating bomb threats to HBCUs as hate crimes; Georgia voucher legislation would pay $6,000 toward K-12 tuition; Federal money will help repair Georgia bridges; Atlanta's Hammonds House Museum in turmoil
In America's Original Sin, author John Rhodehamel examines the life of John Wilkes Booth and his motive for the murder of President Abraham Lincoln. Rhodhamel argues Booth was a White Supremacist and his fear of the integration of a Black community under Lincoln threatened the life he and others like him enjoyed. Next we talk with Karen Comer Lowe, Executive Director and Chief Curator of Atlanta's Hammonds House Museum. On exhibit through the end of January is Exhibiting Culture: Highlights from the Hammonds House Museum Collection. At the center of the collection are 250 works collected by the home's former owner Dr. Otis Thrash Hammonds including work by master artist Romare Bearden and the oldest known painting by acclaimed landscape artist Robert S. Duncanson. There are also works on display showcasing the work of Black female artists including Elizabeth Catlett, Nellie Mae Rowe and Renee' Stout.
As the nation reeled from video of the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis and the subsequent protests, Time magazine ran a searing cover image capturing the moment. A painting of a young black girl in silhouette led the double issue, titled “America Must Change.” Atlanta artist Charly Palmer was commissioned by Time's artistic director to render an image that would capture the seminal episode in the nation's history. You can see that painting and more of Palmer's work in a retrospective titled “Departure” at the newly reopened Hammonds House Museum. Rosalind Bentley spoke with Palmer about his work and she's her to bring us that conversation.
Lois Reitzes speaks with Charly Palmer about his retrospective of works on view at the newly reopened Hammonds House Museum. Privacy Policy and California Privacy Notice.
Lois Reitzes talks with Leatrice Ellzy about her time at Hammonds House Museum as well as her move to senior director of programming at the Apollo Theatre in New York; Matt Paxton about the new PBS series "Legacy List," which airs every Wednesday at 5PM on ATL-PBA; and High Museum curator Michael Rooks about David Driskell's first posthumous exhibition, "Icons of Nature and History" on view through May 9th.
Our guest at the table tonight on Into the Absurd was visual artist, poet and founding director of the Institute for Advanced Study in Black Aesthetics, Theodore A. Harris (https://theodoreharris.weebly.com/). Theodore A. Harris – born in 1966 in New York City and raised in Philadelphia, where his art practice is based. Harris is a collagist, poet, curator, and essayist on the intersection of art and politics. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally in galleries and museums such as The Woodmere Art Museum, Philadelphia Pennsylvania; NeMe in Limassol, Cyprus; The University of Chicago Center in Paris, France; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Hammonds House Museum and Resource Center of African American Art, Atlanta, Georgia; Harmony House Stanford University, Stanford, California.His work is in private and public collections including the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, La Salle University Art Museum, Center for Africana Studies University of Pennsylvania, Saint Louis University Museum of Art, Du Bois College House University of Pennsylvania, and Lincoln University. He has held residences at the Ashe Cultural Arts Center (New Orleans); 40th Street A-I-R (Philadelphia); Hammonds House Museum and Resource Center of African American Art (Atlanta, GA); International Festival of Arts and Ideas (New Haven, CT).He has co-authored books with Amiri Baraka, Our Flesh of Flames (Anvil Arts Press); Malcolm X as Ideology, and with Fred Moten: i ran from it and was still in it (Cusp Books). His current book is from the series by the same name Thesentür: Conscientious Objector to Formalism. He is the founding director of The Institute for Advanced Study in Black Aesthetics.
BAIA BITS: Origins of Hammonds House Museum Little Moments Where Knowledge Meets Art BAIA BITS are produced in part by the generous support of our Patreon members with a special shout out to Zadig & Voltaire.
Lois Reitzes interviews author Katie Kennedy about her illustrated guide to the Constitution of the United States , "The Constitution Decoded"; Camille Russell Love of the City of Atlanta Mayor's Office of Cultural Affairs and Leatrice Ellzy of Hammonds House Museum about this year's ELEVATE Atlanta: Equity Activism and Engagement; and Sherri Scott of "Big Facts, Small Acts" about an arts campaign to promote safety during the pandemic
Lois Reitzes interviews author Soniah Kamal about her book “Unmarriageable,” a Pakistani take on Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”; and Carl Anthony and Leatrice Ellzy about the virtual series "Conversations about Jazz and Other Distractions" hosted by Hammonds House Museum;
Lois Reitzes interviews Carl Anthony and Leatrice Ellzy about the virtual series "Conversations about Jazz and Other Distractions" hosted by Hammonds House Museum; as well as Robert Battle and Donald Byrd about the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater's performance of "Greenwood," based on the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
Lois Reitzes talks with Art Beats Atlanta co-founders Rachel May and David Smith about their virtual offerings; poet Jessica Care Moore about her new collection "We Want Our Bodies Back" ahead of a virtual event with Hammonds House Museum; and authors Kimberly Jones and Gilly Segal about their novel "I'm Not Dying With You Tonight."
Over the years, Atlanta has become known for several different things including its diverse musical heritage, sports teams, Southern hospitality and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world’s busiest passenger airport. Atlanta has even grown to include several cultural destinations including Hammonds House Museum, recently named the No. 4 Best Museum in Atlanta by TimeOut Atlanta. […] The post Dandy Lion Exhibit Ending Soon at Hammonds House Museum appeared first on Atlanta Real Estate Forum.
Over the years, Atlanta has become known for several different things including its diverse musical heritage, sports teams, Southern hospitality and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world's busiest passenger airport. Atlanta has even grown to include several cultural destinations including Hammonds House Museum, recently named the No. 4 Best Museum in Atlanta by TimeOut Atlanta. Hammonds House Museum Executive Director Leatrice Ellzy joins co-hosts Carol Morgan and Todd Schnick on this week's Around Atlanta segment of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio to discuss the museum's extended Dandy Lion: (Re)Articulating Black Masculine Identity exhibit as well as other upcoming events and volunteer and donation opportunities. Originally created as a pop-up photography exhibition in Harlem, Dandy Lion: (Re)Articulating Black Masculine Identity was curated by Shantrelle P. Lewis and is on display through May 31, 2019, at Hammonds House Museum. Dandy Lion features 88 pieces which highlight the current expressions of the Black Dandy phenomenon in popular culture. The first full exhibition of its kind, Dandy Lion spotlights young men who defy conventional and uniform understandings of Black masculinity by mixing Victorian-era fashion with traditional African dress sensibilities. Using their self-fashioned bodies as sites of resistance, contemporary Black dandies are complicating modern narratives of what it means to be Black, masculine and fashionable in the 21st century. Set in an 1872 Victorian-era house, the museum is appropriately named for its former occupant Dr. Otis Thrash Hammonds, a prominent Atlanta physician and patron of the arts. Located at 503 Peeples Street SW in the West End neighborhood of Atlanta, the Hammonds House Museum is a museum for fine African American art. With a mission “to preserve, exhibit, interpret and increase public awareness about the contributions that visual artists of African descent have made to world culture," the non-profit museum focuses on artistic excellence, culture and community. To learn more about activities and events at Hammonds House Museum, listen to the full interview above or visit www.HammondsHouse.org. A special thank you to Jackson EMC for sponsoring Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio. Jackson EMC offers homebuyers peace of mind and lower bills with its certified Right Choice™ new home program. These homes are built to be energy efficient and sustainable with improved indoor air quality, convenience and comfort. For more information on Right Choice new homes and Jackson EMC, visit https://RightChoice.JacksonEMC.com. Please subscribe to Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio on iTunes. If you like this week's show, be sure to rate it. The “Around Atlanta” segment, sponsored by Denim Marketing, airs on Thursdays and is designed to showcase the best of metro Atlanta – the communities, attractions and special events that make this city great. To submit your event, community or attraction to the Around Atlanta edition of Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio, contact Denim Marketing at 770-383-3360 or fill out the Atlanta Real Estate Forum contact form here.
Recorded at the Hammonds House Museum, visual artist and printmaker Katrina Andry talks about her favorite things about New Orleans, how she began her career as a printmaker, and how she addresses race and culture in her work. Andry delves deeply into how society shapes stereotypes around people of color, the trigger words used by the media to frame those stereotypes, and how those stories get perpetuated over time. She also gives some context to the use of the term "Watermelon Face" and why she's very intentional with word choices in the titles of her work.
EPISODE 66 ON THE JERRY ROYCE SHOW -Charlotte Riley-Webb is her real name, and she is an amazing woman that can paint, illustrate, write, cook and act. She is more than a triple-threat! Listen & Learn Segment on The Jerry Royce Show.An Atlanta native, Charlotte Riley-Webb moved with her family to Cleveland, Ohio as a toddler, where she was educated in the public school system and earned her B.F.A. degree from The Cleveland Institute of Art but has continued her education throughout the years. As a professional visual artist, Charlotte documented the essence of her culture in her three year traveling painting exhibition, "From Stories of My America", which debuted at the Hammonds House Museum in Atlanta in 2001 and exhibited in seven different museums and fine art galleries in the south. Over the years her venues extended across the country and beyond the states to include Surinam, South America and Anguilla, British West Indies. Webb's work is included in numerous, private, business and corporate collections. Her public works installations include Faces and Phases of Fulton, a mural size painting installed in the Fulton County Public Service office in Atlanta and the installation of her collaborative medium, "sculpted paintings" which she creates with her sculptor husband, Lucious.
EPISODE 66 ON THE JERRY ROYCE SHOW -Charlotte Riley-Webb is her real name, and she is an amazing woman that can paint, illustrate, write, cook and act. She is more than a triple-threat! Listen & Learn Segment on The Jerry Royce Show.An Atlanta native, Charlotte Riley-Webb moved with her family to Cleveland, Ohio as a toddler, where she was educated in the public school system and earned her B.F.A. degree from The Cleveland Institute of Art but has continued her education throughout the years. As a professional visual artist, Charlotte documented the essence of her culture in her three year traveling painting exhibition, "From Stories of My America", which debuted at the Hammonds House Museum in Atlanta in 2001 and exhibited in seven different museums and fine art galleries in the south. Over the years her venues extended across the country and beyond the states to include Surinam, South America and Anguilla, British West Indies. Webb's work is included in numerous, private, business and corporate collections. Her public works installations include Faces and Phases of Fulton, a mural size painting installed in the Fulton County Public Service office in Atlanta and the installation of her collaborative medium, "sculpted paintings" which she creates with her sculptor husband, Lucious.