The Gabber - July 9, 2020

Page 13

arts

ANNA CARADONNA

Cora Marshall in her studio.

The Art of Identity: Finding Cora Marshall By Lynn Taylor

“My work is rooted in identity, from a spiritual place,” says artist Cora Marshall, “and allows me to find my place in the world through my experiences and those of others close to me.” Marshall’s identity – steeped in her sense of self, home, and community – is ever apparent in her art. She mixes and melds symbols and meanings in her portraits, creating multi-layered narratives drawn from connections to her African and Native American ancestors. And yet, she had no experience with art until she attended college at Howard University. “I took my first art class as an undergraduate to meet a fine arts requirement,” she says, “and by the end of my junior year, I had switched my major to art education.” Marshall earned her Master’s Degree and taught for over 20 years in the public school system in Alexandria, Virginia. After earning her doctorate in art from New York University, she taught at Central Connecticut State University. She retired in 2013 and is currently Professor of Art Emeritus and continues to teach two online digital photography courses at CCSU. She moved to Gulfport in 2013. At the start of her training, Marshall explains, she created art with an absence of color. While researching her grandmother’s Cherokee heritage after her father’s death, she says she had such a spiritual experience during her exploration of the Cherokee people that the “color came bursting through.” Marshall creates much of her art as themed collections. Her portfolios include “Toiling Upward,” based on jobs held by her ancestors, “Clan and Kin” about family, and “Golden

Years,” which portrays the resiliency of seniors. One of her most moving series is titled Runaway: Going Going Gone a collection of paintings of enslaved men, women and children whose stories she discovered while doing research at the Library of Congress. “The written descriptions in the runaways ads I found were so vivid,” she says, “but these people existed only on paper. I wanted to give them a face and a personality.” She changed her technique for this series of portraits, moving from oils to mixed media, which enabled her to embed words into the paintings. But she felt the people she brought to life through her work seemed “too present,” so she covered the paintings with a layer of wax to give them a “veil of mystery.” She produced four or five a year and wound up with 40 paintings. Marshall said she chose the subjects for this series by the stories that moved her most. “The desire to be free is ever present when you are enslaved,” says Marshall. “The women were amazing to me. It was difficult for a woman of color, but a woman of color with a baby made it extremely difficult to go off to find a better life. A line in one of the ads particularly moved me: ‘As she left, she struck the owner with a rock.’ That shows personality.” Marshall created Facebook posts around her runaway portraits as an inspiration for activists during this current moment of unrest. She remembers her time in Washington, D.C. during the Black Arts Movement, when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave his “I Have a Dream” speech and when protestors flooded city streets after his assassination. Cora continued on page 14

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Articles inside

Announcements II

1min
page 26

The Gabs

1min
page 24

‘Suppress Your Cough, Not Your Vote’

1min
page 24

Summer Treats We Loved

1min
page 22

Meet the Local Big Fat Greek Family of Restaurateurs

4min
pages 20-21

The Gabber book club

2min
page 18

The Art of Cooking at Home

6min
pages 16-17

The Gabber - July 9, 2020

1min
page 15

The Art of Identity: Finding Cora Marshall

3min
pages 13-14

Save our strays

1min
page 12

Weekly horoscope

2min
page 12

Gulfport shop swap

5min
pages 10-11

Gulfport

1min
page 9

Gulfport police use of force

2min
page 8

Need a Mask? For Some County Residents, It’s Tricky

2min
page 5

Announcements

1min
page 4

GeckoFest 2020 canceled

1min
pages 1, 19

Gabber Newspaper sale

2min
pages 1, 7

Florida flamingo

1min
page 3

Publisher's note

2min
page 2

OLLI offers all-access smorgasbord for summer

2min
page 6
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