Connect with us

Arts + Culture

Black Artist Show at Frontier Warren 🎨

Local Black artists will have their works on display at the Frontier Warren Co-working Space on February 25-26, 2022.

Published

on

debra evans taylor artist

In celebration of Black History Month 2022, Frontier Warren in collaboration with Warren Artist Market (WAM) is hosting a Black Art Show at the Art Frontier Gallery at Frontier Warren on Friday, February 25th and Saturday, February 26th. This event is sponsored by The Warrenist and Trinity Source.

The show will feature the work of three local artists:

THOMAS PARK (mixed media)
DEBRA EVANS TAYLOR (acrylic paintings)
WHEELER SMITH (acrylic paintings)

Selected works of Rashaun Rucker and the late J.A. Person will also be on display, some of which will be for sale as a fundraiser for the Warren Artist Market, a dynamic group that hosts a regular poetry event on First Fridays at Frontier Warren.

There will be a reception where attendees can meet and greet the artists on Friday, February 25th from 6-8 pm, and the show will continue Saturday, February 26th from 11 am to 4 pm.

During the Friday reception, wine will be available by donation. Refreshments will be provided by our generous sponsors.

Frontier Warren Co-working Space is located at 140 South Main Street in Warrenton, NC.

Wheeler Smith

Image 1 of 6

Source: Frontier Warren press release

Continue Reading
Advertisement
2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. Jessica

    May 3, 2022 at 12:55 pm

    Wow. I hate that I missed this! Will they do it again?

    • Crystal

      May 3, 2022 at 5:16 pm

      Hi! I’m not sure at the moment. It was a fantastic art show featuring incredibly talented artists. There’s a video featuring the art that was on display on our Facebook page.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Arts + Culture

Vote for Lakeland Cultural Arts Center for the Levitt AMP Grant Award !!!

Vote for Lakeland Cultural Arts Center for the Levitt AMP Grant Award!

Published

on

levitt amp lakeland cultural arts center littleton north carolina

Lakeland Cultural Arts Center is now in the final voting stage of The Levitt AMP [Your City] Grant Awards, which is an exciting, multi-year matching grant opportunity bringing the joy of free, live music to small to mid-sized towns and cities. Littleton is one of only 36 communities selected for this opportunity and we’ll need the support of our entire community to receive this grant!

This funding will establish a free concert series in Lakeland’s new 1200 seat amphitheater space slated to open next year.

Support Lakeland Cultural Arts Center by voting at vote.levitt.org between Sept. 12 and 21!

Continue Reading

Arts + Culture

Library and School System Team Up to Bring Bass Trombonist to Students, Families

NC Symphony bass trombonist Matthew Neff will perform at the Warren County Memorial Library on August 10, 2022 at 10am.

Published

on

Matthew Neff warren county nc symphony

A partnership between Warren County Memorial Library, Warren County Schools, and the North Carolina Symphony will bring a morning of music and fun to Warren County students and families. Interested parties can stop by the library on Wednesday, August 10th at 10:00am.

This 30-minute program will feature NC Symphony bass trombonist Matthew Neff reading a book about music, talking about his instrument and how other instruments make their sounds – plus more surprises!

The North Carolina Symphony’s Music Discovery program, funded by PNC Grow Up Great and the Warren County Community Foundation, is geared for preschool and elementary-age children and their families.

Matthew Neff has been the bass trombonist with the North Carolina Symphony since January 2020. Prior to joining the Symphony, he was a member of the United States Navy Band in Washington, D.C., performing bass trombone in the Commodores jazz ensemble, brass quintet, and ceremonial band. During his years in Washington, he had an extensive freelance career and performed with symphonies across the Mid-Atlantic States. An advocate for music education, Neff has conducted master classes and clinics throughout the country and served as Adjunct Professor of Trombone at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, all while maintaining an active private low brass studio in his home. Neff is enjoying his new home in Raleigh with his wife, Tricia, and two of their four daughters.

For more information about this event and upcoming programs at the Warren County Memorial Library, visit wcmlibrary.org for event details and additional services offered.

All library programs are open and free to the public.

Call the library for more information at 252-257-4990.

The Warren County Memorial Library is located at 119 S. Front Street, Warrenton NC 27589.

Continue Reading

Arts + Culture

“Seeking Justice” Production Returns June 25

Updated production includes the “voices” of the women who were affected by the 1921 events

Published

on

A reenactment of the 1921 trial of the Norlina 16, and reflection on the 1921 lynchings of Plummer Bullock and Alfred Williams in Warren County, N.C.

WHEN: June 25, 2022, in the Superior Courtroom of the Warren County Courthouse, 109 South Main Street, Warrenton, N.C. at 11:00 A.M.

On a wintry night in January 1921, a group of Black men in the small railroad town of Norlina set out to confront a white mob. The mob was planning to β€œshoot up” the local Black neighborhood over an argument that happened earlier in the week about a 10Β’ purchase of apples. The Black men knew that in arming themselves and defending their families, they were putting their lives at risk. Yet they marched into the night, and soon met the advancing mob.

The gunfight that ensued saved their neighborhood, but also led to the arrests of 18 Black men, two of whom were pulled from the jail less than 24 hours later and lynched. The remaining men spent four months in the state Penitentiary, forced to do ball-and-chain labor while awaiting their trial. β€œSeeking Justice” tells the story of these men’s return to Warren County to face a white judge and jury.

Taking place in the same courtroom in which the original trial occurred 101 years ago, the β€œSeeking Justice” reenactment chronicles the fate of these 16 men, who have come to be called the Norlina 16. At the same time, it recounts the story of the lynchings of Plummer Bullock and Alfred Williams, and tells the narrative of Mr. Bullock’s brother Matthew (who was also in that gunfight), who fled to Canada and successfully fought a federal attempt to extradite him back to N.C. Finally, it offers the first-person stories of some of the women whose husbands, sons, brothers, and lovers were ripped from their families by the lynch mob and the court.

norlina 16 warren county north carolina seeking justice

Media coverage of the 1921 trial mistakenly placed the
defendants’ number at 17, a figure that indicated those
indicted but not actually tried; the 17th person, Matthew
Bullock, had by this time escaped to freedom in Canada.
(Photo courtesy of the News and Observer)

The players in β€œSeeking Justice” are all community members, most of whom first learned of this history during last year’s reenactment. The core scriptβ€”which draws heavily on notes from the 1921 Superior Court proceedingsβ€”was written by local Black playwright Thomas Park. The first-person narrativesβ€”new to this year’s productionβ€”were created by five local women who worked with UNC playwright Jacqueline Lawton to imagine the emotional experiences of four female family members caught up in this violence. The fifth testimony takes the perspective of the Black jailer who was on duty when the jail was attacked; its writer was N.C.’s first Black woman jailer, who worked in that same Warrenton jailhouse many decades later.

Research by UNC’s Descendants Project provided a foundation for both the courtroom drama and the women’s testimonies.

β€œThis production gives the audience an opportunity to experience the time in which these tragedies occurred,” notes Jereann King Johnson, founder of Warren County’s 1921 Project. β€œIt also gives them insight into the impact that these lynchings and arrests had on these men’s families and communities, and forces them to recognize how those impacts continue to shape our lives today.”

β€œHopefully,” adds Dr. Cosmos George, the president of the Warren County branch of the NAACP, β€œthis presentation of β€˜Seeking Justice II’ will start an honest conversation about racism and racial terror that leads to understanding, healing and reconciliation.”

β€œSeeking Justice II” is a collaborative project of The 1921 Project, the Warren County Branch of the NAACP, the Warren County African American Historical Collective, UNC’s Descendants Project, and UNC’s Humanities for the Public Good Initiative.

This event is free and open to the public.

Seeking Justice II Trial of Norlina 16 stageplay warren county nc

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright Β© 2021-2024 Absolutely Crystal LLC d/b/a Warrenist All Rights Reserved unless specified. | Disclaimer

error: Content is protected !!