History

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Historic African-American Art Exhibit Coming to South Florida

In the Hands of African American Collectors: The Personal Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey

The Norton Museum of Art will present an exhibition drawn from the artistic and historical treasures collected by Bernard and Shirley Kinsey of Los Angeles, California. The exhibition, "In The Hands Of African American Collectors: The Personal Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey," includes some 90 paintings, sculptures, prints, books, documents, manuscripts and vintage photographs the couple has loaned to the Norton Museum from their personal collection. This is the first time that some of these rare artifacts and documents have been made available for public viewing. The exhibition will open on April 19, 2008 and continue through July 20, 2008, at the Museum, which is located at 1451 S. Olive Avenue in West Palm Beach.

Kinsey, the former Xerox Vice President who became Co-Chairman of RLA (Rebuild Los Angeles) in Los Angeles in 1992, and his wife have been collecting for more than 35 years. They started collecting as a way to savor and share their travels, but their art soon became a repository for African American intellectual, historic and artistic works. A vast array of art, artifacts and historical documents fill their home and reinforce the Kinsey's philosophy that tangible objects are evidence of history. "Shirley and I have a thing. I buy the dead artists, she buys the living artists," Kinsey says. "Because I'm looking at the historical part of the thing and she's looking at what she likes and to support emerging artists."

Included in the exhibition are outstanding works of art by leading African American artists that depict the Transatlantic Slave Trade, American Slavery, Civil War and Reconstruction, Nineteenth Century Landscapes, the Harlem Renaissance, The Next Generation and Post Modernism, as well as historical documents and books. The exhibition originated at the California African American Museum (CAAM) in Los Angeles and is designed to bring attention to the diverse aesthetic interests and collections held by African Americans.

Both Kinsey's are native Floridians who met while they were attending Florida A&M University. Shirley was arrested for her participation in a protest and both were active in marches and sit-ins. They have been married for 40 years and have a son, Khalil. When Bernard Kinsey left Xerox in 1991 after 20 years, the Xerox Black Employee Organization commissioned a portrait of the Kinseys' son by Artis Lane as a retirement gift. (Lane is a painter, sculptor and printmaker known for her portrait of Rosa Parks commissioned by the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery). There is also an Artis Lane portrait of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey commissioned as a gift by several of their friends.

The collection includes important historical documents as well as artistic works. "Art is precious, but historical documents are rare," says Bernard Kinsey. Their collection isn't only African American, but mostly. It contains paintings and sculpture by artists such as Ernie Barnes, Artis Lane, Richard Mayhew, John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Robert Scott Duncanson, Jacob Lawrence, Romare Bearden, Henry Tanner, Jonathan Green, Phoebe Beasley, Sam Gilliam and others. Books including an 1632 edition of the extremely rare Leo Africanus, September 1773 publication of poems by Phillis Wheatley; rare tintypes and even letters like one from Malcolm X to Alex Haley and some from the distant and not-so-distant past. Kinsey's motivation to collect comes from a simple question to learn who we are and where we came from. And to explore his people's history in the United States history that the couple actively participated in during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.

As the Kinsey's evolved as collectors, they began to identify and collect the work of artists who make up and define African American art and culture. Moreover, they collect documents that illuminate historical moments. They see themselves as caretakers of their collection, their ownership temporary. They say, Bernard Kinsey continues, "We are really more keepers of this art and historical documents, rather than owners, because frankly, no one can really own this in a sense."

The Kinseys are at a stage in life where they can afford to indulge their passions---one even greater than collecting: sharing. Together they have raised more than $22 million for community based organizations, churches and scholarships for historically Black colleges.

Bernard Kinsey currently serves as president of KBK Enterprises, a management consulting firm. He is a recognized expert and leader in the field of urban revitalization and economic development and has counseled the governments of South Africa, Germany, England, and France.

"In The Hands of African American Collectors: The Personal Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey" was organized by the California African American Museum. This exhibition and its associated catalogue were made possible by funding from the State of California and Friends, The Foundation of the California African American Museum and lead sponsors Northern Trust and Toyota Motor Sales. The Palm Beach presentation of the exhibit is funded in part by Northern Trust, Melvin and Claire Levine and Starbucks Coffee Company.

Saturday, April 19 is FAMU Alumni Day at the Norton Museum of Art and all Florida A&M University alumni have been invited to attend. A conversation with Bernard and Shirley Kinsey is scheduled for 3 p.m. with a tour of the exhibition at 4 p.m. and a private reception for FAMU Alumni at 5 p.m.



*** Blogging Black Miami Extra ***

The Kinseys featured in JET Magazine:

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Know Your History: Broward County's 'Colored Beach'

'Colored Beach' gets recognition

[email protected]

James Bradley enjoys the serene view of a beach at John U. Lloyd State Park on Friday.
EMILY MICHOT/MIAMI HERALD STAFF
James Bradley enjoys the serene view of a beach at John U. Lloyd State Park on Friday.

As James D. Bradley Jr. scans the milelong strip of sand once known as ''Colored Beach,'' he recalls boarding a ferry at Port Everglades 50 years ago, or riding across the sand in his father's jeep, to join hundreds at the only place in Broward where they could swim in the ocean.

Visitors from across South Florida would come to the northern tip of Dania Beach at what is now John U. Lloyd Beach State Park, home to one of many segregated beaches once found around the state. [More...]

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Art Teele Tragedy on Film

Two UM students are putting the finishing touches on a documentary on Art Teele, politician extraordinaire who commited suicide in the lobby of The Miami Herald on July 27, 2005. The highly anticipated film project was made with very little money but is sure to generate a lot of interest. Stay tuned for an early 2008 showing.

Here's an interesting video clip of the production. Do check it out and prepare for the controversy to be re-ignited.

Related Link: Art Teele tragedy now a film project

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Know Your History: Railroad Shop

As time marches on and progress made, crucial to the quality of life for Blacks in Miami is a knowledge, appreciation and respect for the sacrifice and accomplishments of the people who came before us and shaped the history and landscape of the community we enjoy today.

Many know of Overtown with it’s once bustling businesses but few know of the area in Allapattah called Railroad Shop. Check out the Miami Herald article on Railroad Shop. Be sure to read the article and share the information with your children.

Here’s an excerpt:

Railroad Shop: The day a black community died

Posted on Mon, Sep. 24, 2007

BY ANDREA ROBINSON

[email protected] 

Railroad_shop

Photos by PATRICK FARRELL/MIAMI HERALD STAFF

Georgia Ayers, who grew up in the Railroad Shop Colored Addition, holds some memorabilia -- family and friends photos, and an Abstract of Title to the property the family inhabited -- from before their eviction 60 years ago.

» More Photos

With the knock on the door of their modest home in Railroad Shop Colored Addition, a sense of dread overcame Deloris Johnson, her younger sister and her mother. They had two hours to move out.

A block or so away, James Bendross saw what was happening at the Johnsons' home. He and other boys home from school for the summer helped move belongings from neighbors' homes.

In North Carolina, Georgia Jones got word that her grandmother, Eliza Pierce, was forcibly removed from the home her family built in 1918.

Aug. 1, 1947, is forever seared in Jones' mind. On that steamy day, white police officers ordered 35 black families to leave Railroad Shop Colored Addition -- land that the Dade School Board wanted for a school, with room for the city of Miami to build a park for the white neighborhoods surrounding Railroad Shop.

At the time, most news organizations, including The Miami Herald, largely ignored the ramifications of what was happening -- except for the black newspapers of that day. Today, those who lived through the ordeal want future generations to know what happened to the area now known as Allapattah. They are pushing to have a middle school and streets renamed to reflect Railroad Shop's proud history.

It ended with the cruelest of ironies, when rain fell the night of the evictions, and many residents lost their possessions.

Some of the police officers apparently found their task distasteful. A Miami News article quoted an unidentified officer at the scene: ``I wish I wasn't a cop today.''

RESISTANCE FUTILE

Sixty years ago, the residents fought back against the government's condemnation of their property, hiring a black attorney to take on a white City Hall and School Board. In July 1947, a judge gave the nod for ``immediate possession of the property.''

Two years later, the remaining homes were taken by the city to build a park and a fire station.

Families were offered about $150 per lot from the government, although several families negotiated for more. Pierce received $4,500 for a five-room home and eight lots that were filled with mango and avocado trees. Those who wanted to keep their homes had to pay the county for moving the houses to another lot. The few who could pay moved their houses to other parts of Miami or to the Carver Ranches section of Broward County. [Continued…]