Angela Davis Johnson

{{short description|American painter (born 1981)}}

{{Peacock|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox artist

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| name = Angela Davis Johnson

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| birth_date = 1981 (age 44)

| birth_place = Orlando, Florida

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| nationality = American

| education = Self-taught

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| known_for = Painting, sculpture, installation art, ritual performance art

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| website = https://www.angeladavisjohnson.com/

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Angela Davis Johnson (born 1981) is an American interdisciplinary artist whose work engages themes related to the African diaspora and cultural memory in the American South. She has lived and worked in cities including Philadelphia, Atlanta, New Orleans, and areas of Arkansas.

Early life

Angela Davis Johnson was born in Orlando, Florida. Angela and her family later moved to Virginia, where she attended Governor's School for the Arts, an art magnet high school in Norfolk, Virginia. She was first inspired to create art by her mother, who encouraged her and her siblings to explore their creativity through singing, reading, whittling, and purchased art supplies for them.{{Cite web |last=Relyea |first=Laura |date=2018-07-23 |title=Kind of Blue: Angela Davis Johnson tends to the wounds of the diaspora with "BLU BLAK" |url=https://www.artsatl.org/kind-of-blue-angela-davis-johnson-tends-to-the-wounds-of-the-diaspora-with-blu-blak/ |access-date=2023-06-09 |website=ARTS ATL |language=en-US}}

Artistry

Johnson comes from a long line of healers and midwives, a tradition she taps into for her work.{{Cite web |last=Rosa |first=Amanda |date=July 18, 2022 |title=Healer, rebel, tribal leader: Meet the artists at this Miami residency for BIPOC mothers |url=https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/visual-arts/article262705577.html |access-date=June 9, 2023 |website=Miami Herald}} Her work largely explores how Black people have withstood the many challenges and injustices within our world. She states, "The ways that we've been able to withstand, the ways that we've been able to become our water, become our rain; how we've navigated this space that we're in, this time, and have been doing it through our songs and our caretaking of one another."

When asked what she hoped people would take away from her body of work, Johnson responded:

I want people to feel the complexity of the embodied experience of Black people in this world. I want people to feel that when they see my work. We’re not just superheroes. We are all things. We are souls living this life. I want people to experience that in my work, feel the depths of that. I want people to recognize and feel their soul. See the thing beyond the construct, which is light, you know. To me, it’s like the past, present, and future. It’s all happening right now in this moment. I want people to feel that when they come by my work, when they’re away from it. I want people to witness all of that in all of our BIPOC works.
One of Johnson's paintings, “An Open Mouth Creek”, was described by The New York Times as depicting "a Black girl with sad eyes, blue hair, and whose mouth is shut, though she looks like she wants to talk. It is a piece that depicts the silencing of Black women throughout history."{{Cite news |last=Smith |first=Kelundra |date=2018-12-11 |title=Overlooked in Atlanta, Black Female Artists Try Miami |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/11/arts/design/atlanta-black-female-artists-art-basel-miami-beach.html |access-date=2023-06-09 |issn=0362-4331}} According to The Sumter Item, "What first strikes the eye and consciousness when encountering Johnson's work is the scope, the scenery, and the subjects."{{Cite web |last=Item |first=NAPOLEON WELLS Special to The Sumter |date=2019-05-22 |title=The Blues and the Sky: Artists tell stories of black personhood, survival |url=https://www.theitem.com/stories/the-blues-and-the-sky-artists-tell-stories-of-black-personhood-survival,327716 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230609183802/https://www.theitem.com/stories/the-blues-and-the-sky-artists-tell-stories-of-black-personhood-survival,327716 |archive-date=2023-06-09 |access-date=2023-06-09 |website=The Sumter Item |language=en}}

Her style incorporates scraps of fabric into many of her oil paintings as homage to her mother, a seamstress, as well as to introduce more humble materials into fine arts spaces.{{cite news |last1=Feaster |first1=Felicia |date=16 April 2020 |title=Talented emerging Atlanta artists to watch |work=Atlanta Journal-Constitution |url=https://www.ajc.com/entertainment/talented-emerging-atlanta-artists-watch/gYoQcP7VWRO0V0aCF6A0lM/ |accessdate=11 August 2020}}

Awards, fellowships and residencies

= Awards and fellowships =

  • 2020/21 Intercultural Leadership Institute Fellowship
  • 2018 MINT ATL Leap Year Fellowship
  • 2017 Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grant Nominee
  • 2017 Ensemble Theater Grant Awardee
  • 2016 Joan Mitchell Emerging Artist Nominee
  • 2015 Alternate Roots/Joan Mitchell Visual Art Scholar

= Residencies =

  • 2022 Fountainhead Residency
  • 2022 The New Freedom Project/ BAIA, Atlanta, GA
  • 2019 Tempus Project, Tampa, FL
  • 2019 Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts
  • 2019 Fallawayinto Intensive, Philadelphia, PA
  • 2018 Hambidge Arts Center Residency, Rabun County, GA
  • 2018 MINT Leap Year, Atlanta, GA

References

{{reflist|refs=

{{Cite web|url=https://www.commoncreativatlanta.com/?p=9655|title=Q & A {{!}} Artist Angela Davis Johnson {{!}} CommonCreativ ATL|language=en-US|access-date=2019-03-23}}

{{Cite web|url=https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/5b7ac8_3dadc370242e49f88cf6b9cbe6853285.pdf|title=Angela Davis Johnson CV|website=Angeladavisjohnson.com|access-date=Mar 23, 2019}}

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