We Want To Live (Asé)

Loading...

Date

2023

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Repository Usage Stats

71
views
91
downloads

Abstract

Abstract

As a creative project with an exhibition as its final exposition, my Master’s project is a series of charcoal drawings, mixed-media drawings, mixed-media paintings, original essays, newspaper articles, sculptures, and poetry protesting the frequent senseless killings of unarmed Black people in America. (Also included, is a copy of a personal letter from former United States senator Richard Burr). My Master’s Thesis project was inspired in part by one of my ancestors, my Great-Great-Great Grandfather, Mr. Samuel Nathaniel Nuckles, an activist, a formerly enslaved person, and a former member of The South Carolina House of Representatives from the years 1868 to 1872. (Grant 260, 533) Additionally, inspiration for this project evolved from my own experience with unnecessary/unwarranted police brutality, at the hands of South Carolina police, from which I was fortunate enough to survive. However, as history has shown us, this is not always the fate for other unarmed Black people and their encounters with police officers. Currently, we see a rash of killings of unarmed Black people. My goal is to do whatever I can to aid in bringing an end to this unfortunate chaotic trend. Therefore, I create protest artwork and protest poetry not only because the senseless killings of unarmed Black people must stop, but I also create protest artwork and protest poetry because “We Want To Live (Asé).” Asé is a term from the Yoruba language of West Africa, it is a philosophical concept representing power that makes things happen and produces change.

My graduation project exhibition time:

April 17, 2023

Exhibition Space: The Fredric Jameson Gallery-Duke East Campus

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Protest Artwork, Protest Poetry, James Baldwin, Lillian Smith, Samuel Nuckles- Member of The South Carolina House of Representatives from 1868 to 1872, Murders of Unarmed Black People, Clint Smith, Elizabeth Alexander, Teaching The True History of America, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, I Am Not Your Negro, Ways to Curtail Racism, Humanization of Black People, Activists, Allies, and Artists, Union County South Carolina, Cherokee County South Carolina, Ida Bell Wells-Barnett, Gwendolyn Brooks

Citation

Citation

Wallace, Toya (2023). We Want To Live (Asé). Capstone project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/30363.


Dukes student scholarship is made available to the public using a Creative Commons Attribution / Non-commercial / No derivative (CC-BY-NC-ND) license.