Fine Art PR Publicity Announcements News and Information
Fine Art PR Publicity Announcements News and Information

Emory Douglas Mural Celebrates Work of Legendary Black Panther

Fifteen youths from Harlem worked with Groundswell artists Chris Beck and Clare Herron to create a monumental mural inspired by the work of legendary artist and former Black Panther Emory Douglas. Emory Douglas was the Revolutionary Artist of the Black Panther Party and later became its Minister of Culture. The mural project “What We Want, What We Believe” is in conjunction with the major retrospective “Emory Douglas: Black Panther” currently on view at the New Museum on the Bowery through October 18, 2009.

Emory Douglas

Mural Location: VIM Store, 2253 Third Avenue (122nd St & Third Avenue), New York, NY 10035

From the 1960’s until the party disbanded in 1980 he created the design and layout, and oversaw production for the party’s newspaper, the “Black Panther.” Douglas created a vocabulary of images that exemplify how art can encourage political consciousness and function within an activist context. In partnership with New Museum and The Studio Museum in Harlem, Groundswell youth and artists brought to life an original design based on Douglas’s work and utilizing his distinctive graphic style. The mural, entitled “What We Want, What We Believe”, is the first large scale public artwork celebrating the work of Emory Douglas in New York City.

In preparation for the mural project, students attended workshops at the New Museum and Studio Museum to learn about the social and political history that gave rise to the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense and the larger Black Power Movement. As part of the design research process, the students canvassed the neighborhood and interviewed locals to discuss the issues that the communities felt were most relevant, the most common topics being education, health care, and unity. Working with researched ideas and concerns, the students, Emory Douglas, and mural artists Chris Beck and Clare Herron choose to “remix” images from three of Douglas’s earlier images from the “Black Panther” newspaper, with two of his more recent images, and also integrating newly created designs meant to illustrate the community’s core concerns. The resulting mural “What We Want, What We Believe” is a reflection of past, present, and future.

www.newmuseum.org.