Worcester Magazine July 30 - August 5, 2020

Page 23

LAST CALL

Nicole Coleman artist and activist DYLAN AZARI

want our lives respected. We don’t want our people to be brutalized and murdered without consequence. We want to be treated like human beings because that’s what we are. And we believe that all humans should be treated equally with respect and dignity. Thank you for your willingness to be vulnerable and speak the truth. What can you tell me about the damage done to the mural? I am not a professional assessor. But, I can see that people did burnouts. There is a fairly significant amount of damage done to part of the “L.” There are burnouts all the way down and it does look like there might be feces in the middle of one of the letters. That’s all I can tell from just walking down and checking it out. People are definitely trying to come against it.

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How did you get involved with the mural? I had been in contact with Che Anderson about what we’ve been doing in the city around the Black Lives Matter movement and what we should do next. He hipped me to the fact that there were talks of a BLM mural. I said, “You

What was the energy like while you were painting? It was like a cookout. It was like a family reunion. Many of the people I had never met before in my life, but it seemed like we had known each other for years. I told them, “I feel like I’ve known you forever.” That’s just kind of how artists operate. We could all be from different places, different spaces, but we’re on the same wavelength. Creativity is what brings us together.

I saw you speak at the “Say Her Name” rally where you spoke about healing as a Black community. How can we as a society begin to overcome the fear and anger that you’re faced with as a Black woman every day? It’s been really interesting, especially as a Black female femme artist. For me, art has been my one sanctuary. It doesn’t really depend on the medium. It could be music, could be painting, could be dance. Art has been my saving grace for my whole life. And it’s always been an area where I felt like I could be Black out-loud, you know? And even though people try to discourage Black female femme artists, our work is pivotal to this movement and it provides us with a space to release energy into our art we don’t want to keep bottled inside. We’re so strongly rooted in our culture and our heritage. Recently, especially after painting this mural and seeing the amount of hate that’s come against it, it’s been really challenging. The Black

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What is your history with Worcester? I was born at UMass Memorial on February 10th, 1986. I’ve lived in other cities. I spent time in Southern California, New York, and down in Tennessee, but something always brings me back. There’s no place like the Woo.

know, man, you just let me know however I can help.” I didn’t know that would turn into me actually being one of the main artists for this project. I’m not mad about it! I’ve been an artist since I was 6, and I’ve done smaller-scale wall murals, but nothing of this size or on pavement. This was definitely a really special experience on a multitude of levels.

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icole Coleman designed and painted the “B” in Worcester’s Black Lives Matter mural on Major Taylor Boulevard. On Friday, Coleman caught up with Worcester Magazine over the phone while she inspected the damage to the mural incurred by a vandal just hours before.

What does the future look like for you as both an activist and an artist? I am doing everything I can to be a part of the progress. I’m hoping to create more public art here in the city and get more involved in the arts community. I’ve traveled experience is so filled with hardship and with struggle and with a so much over the last few years. lot of difficult mental health issues This is the first time I’ve really felt like, “Okay. This is where I’m most that we don’t discuss publicly. needed and this is my home.” I’m There’s generational trauma that hoping to help build some comexists within the Black commumunity spaces and work with peonity here in America. It’s hard to ple I’ve met around the country on deal with that on its own, and even harder when you wrap up the nonprofit work to increase unity and inclusion. I wrote, “Choose hateful things that are being said and done to us and about us daily. love, not hate,” in the middle of my The artistic outlets where I can go piece for a reason. I think that hate and feel free are now under attack is so divisive and it’s really a tool of evil. Love can do such incredibly too. I really just want people to powerful things. Even this mural understand that saying, “Black project alone showed that people Lives Matter,” is not a statement from all different backgrounds of superiority. It’s a statement of and cultures could come together acknowledgment. We are saying, “Please make note of what we have to create something with a really beautiful message and to celebrate done to contribute in so many Black life and Black heritage and different areas of this country. culture. That’s what means the We’ve helped build this country most to me, not the people out along with other BIPOC groups here trying to create division and of people. We are a part of what tear others apart. My career, my makes America beautiful. We life, my mission, and my legacy are are part of what makes America dedicated to cultivating love and ‘great.’ America can’t be great without Black people.” That’s what togetherness. – Sarah Connell Sanders we’re trying to tell y’all. We just


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