Excerpt:
African Village in America, a dense quarter-acre constructed
art environment in Birmingham, AL, is comprised of dozens
of rough-hewn sculptures and installations commemorating
400 years of African American history. Created over
the past 20 years by Joe Minter, a self-taught African
American artist, the site is an intensely personal artistic
statement and expresses an epic historic and cultural
vision.
The site is designed to testify to the endurance of
Africans through the centuries of slavery and racism
in America and is imbued with political and religious
challenges to the viewer. The environment represents
a spatialisation of history, for by confronting successively
its individual works one is led through a record of
pain and struggle. At the back of the site, overlooking
the cemetery lying behind Minter's yard, is a group
of figures at the base of a large tree stump symbolising
an ancestral African village - the 'motherland and culture
taken away.' Out from this clustering, we are led to
a work that invokes a slave ship and the horrors of
the Middle Passage, which in turn brings us to the main
section of the yard, the dense interweavings of constructions
that bear witness to the history of lynching, slave
and peonage labour, and the generations of black soldiers
who fought and died for the country. Other pieces commemorate
key moments in the civil rights movement such as the
Montgomery bus boycott, Dr Martin Luther King's incarceration
in Birmingham Jail and the 1963 bombing of the 16th
Street Church in Birmingham. Each work acts as a station
of reflection and remembrance of a people's passion,
sacrifice and deliverance. The timeline of historical
testimony extends into the present as the artist continues
to address the moral and political crises of our days
- whether the wars in Iraq, 9/11, the Indian Ocean tsunami
or Hurricane Katrina.
Throughout the site, painted signs identify and comment
on what is being commemorated and challenge the viewers
to affirm the nation's foundational political ideals
and the Christian values of mercy, forgiveness and humility
before God.
African Village in America is the creation of Joe Wade
Minter, Sr, born in Birmingham in 1943. Raised under
the South's Jim Crow laws, Minter vividly remembers
the civil rights struggle in his city. Having graduated
from high school and spent 2 years in the army (1965-1967),
Minter laboured for the next 28 #years in jobs including
metalwork, painting, construction and road work before
retiring in 1995. Although he knew that the civil rights
movement had given blacks the means to fight back against
oppression, he felt deeply that the white man had not
changed at all. On the advice of a fellow 'African brother',
who he sensed was sent by God, Minter set out in 1979
to write his personal meditations on the '400 year journey
of African-American people in America', but soon lay
his pen down. (26 years later, he would complete this
work by self-publishing To You Through Me: The Beginning
of a Link of a Journey of 400 Years.) But he continued
to reflect on the situation of African Americans in
America and in the 1980s, when the Birmingham Civil
Rights Institute was established, Minter grew concerned
that a significant part of the story of the black experience
would never be told. He believed that the contributions
of ordinary citizens who battled for human rights -
who he called the 'foot soldiers' - would be disregarded
in favour of the nationally known figures. Asking God
for a vision, he received a mission to tell 'the story
of the African people lost here in America.'