May. 02
May. 25

Natural Dye Initiative

Date
May 2, 2019 – May 25, 2019
Time
All Day
Location
Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Museum
1417 Thames Street, Baltimore, MD until May 25, 2019

Living Color: Touching the Past, Present and Future through the Art of Natural Dyes

Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Museum
1417 Thames Street, Baltimore, MD until May 25, 2019
Thursday, May 2 - Saturday, May 25, 2019

Opening Reception: Thursday, May 2, 2019 from 6-9pm

We invite you to join us for the opening of an exhibition of artwork and research that explores the social, historical, and economic implications of the cultivation and use of natural dyes in Baltimore and beyond on Thursday, May 2 from 6-9pm. The exhibition will be on view at the Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Museum at 1417 Thames Street, Baltimore, MD until May 25, 2019.

Living Color was developed and curated collaboratively by students and community members in a class at MICA called "Natural Dye as Intercultural Connector." Every Friday since late January, students and faculty from MICA and Coppin State University - as well as artists, researchers and farmers from the Baltimore community - have worked together to learn about the complex histories of natural dyes and their uses.

Living Color investigates themes that arose from the work of the class, including: what it means to dye with plants that have held a spiritual, medicinal role in indigenous communities from Asia to West Africa to the Americas; how to honor these origins and acknowledge the harm that resulted from these dye materials having been commodified, and the keepers of this plant wisdom having been colonized or enslaved; how the growing and use of these plants can heal our relationships with the earth and with each other; and how learning about these ancient practices helps us develop our radical imagination of a more positive collective future.

The exhibition and the class are part of the Baltimore Natural Dye Initiative, which grew out of a 2017 visit by Maryland First Lady Yumi Hogan to the Natural Dyeing Cultural Center in Naju, South Korea. Funded by the Maryland Department of Commerce (through theMaryland State Arts Council) and the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development, the Baltimore Natural Dye Initiative is a public-private partnership that includes MICA, the Maryland Agricultural and Resource-Based Industry Development Corporation, and Baltimore Development Corporation. Additional support for the exhibition comes from the Living Classrooms Foundation.