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Tag: Norwest Gallery of Art

  • Norwest Gallery is heavy on the melanin in sixth anniversary show, but the gallery almost didn’t make it

    Norwest Gallery is heavy on the melanin in sixth anniversary show, but the gallery almost didn’t make it

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    Randiah Camille Green

    Abstract paintings by India Solomon on view at Detroit’s Norwest Gallery as part of Heavy Melanin.

    Walking into Norwest Gallery for the Heavy Melanin exhibit, a painting of blue and white blotches on black draws my eyes to the left.

    Getting closer, I notice there are braids snaking through the piece like a maze underneath clumps of white paint and yellow speckles. There’s something mesmerizing about it, as the braids loop and curl, like the clouds passing time as your momma braids your hair on the porch in the summer and kids splash in fire hydrant water.

    Heavy Melanin is Norwest Gallery of Art’s sixth-year anniversary exhibit. It went up in February and is on view until April 28. As we’d expect from the Black-owned gallery helmed by Asia Hamilton in Detroit’s Grandmont Rosedale neighborhood, Heavy Melanin revels in the diversity of the African and African American aesthetic through a range of mediums.

    “Every February is our anniversary month and it’s always a celebration of Black artists,” Hamilton tells me. “It’s also Black History Month, so we always do an exhibit that celebrates Black artists as a whole and Black people as a whole. That’s why there are so many different genres and expressions of the culture.”

    As you venture further into the gallery, the art oscillates between the deep abstract and figurative depictions of Blackness including sculpture, photography, painting, collage, and even a woven tapestry. It includes work by a slew of Detroit-based artists, as well as some national and international artists as well.

    “Aisha With the Hair,” a photo by Ghanaian photographer Nana Kwadwo Agyei Addo, sits in front of a hazy sunset backdrop, the brown of her skin so rich she seems to glow against the golden time of a day. Her braids loop behind her to mirror the shape of her face, eyeshadow as blue as the hues of sky behind her.

    Elsewhere, Jaiel Nelson paints a young woman with butterflies fluttering around her locs and another in a vulnerable moment with flowers and the winged insect attached to her bare body. Detroit abstract painter India Solomon exhibits two works with darker hues that feel different than her usual, vibrant work.

    The gallery feels exuberant with a joy that makes you want to dance or just sit back and catch a vibe to the soundtrack curated by Detroit Sassi Blaque bumping in the background. But the gallery almost didn’t make it to this moment as Hamilton says she considered closing it several times as she struggled with funding and sales to keep it going.

    “Last year, we were really struggling… I was ready to close this place,” she says. “I mean, I wasn’t ready to close but I was threatening to. It’s hard. I don’t just have extra money to be paying rent.”

    The gallery charged a $20 admission fee for the opening reception of Heavy Melanin and Hamilton says she sold 100 tickets. She says generating income through ticket sales and programming is important for the gallery to survive and encourages visitors to purchase the art, not just look at it.

    “Sales are very important. Art galleries are here to sell art. It’s not a museum, there’s a difference,” she says. “The opening was only $20. You spend that just kicking around.”

    Norwest Gallery also has a “Hype Market Gift Shop” that sells prints and things like handmade jewelry that are more affordable for everyday gallery goers who probably can’t drop $4,000 on an abstract painting. The gallery was also named as an awardee in the Gilbert Family Foundation’s Seed and Bloom program, which awarded 10 Detroit artist organizations $150,000 each, over three years.

    Heavy Melanin is on display through April 28 at Norwest Gallery of Art; 19556 Grand River Ave., Detroit. Gallery hours are from noon-6 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Wednesday and Thursday by appointment, and noon-4 p.m. Sunday.

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • Norwest Gallery hopes to secure new location for Womxnhouse Detroit and a bigger gallery space through Seed and Bloom program

    Norwest Gallery hopes to secure new location for Womxnhouse Detroit and a bigger gallery space through Seed and Bloom program

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    Ten BIPOC artists in Detroit will be getting a boost from the Gilbert Family Foundation over the next three years. 

    The Gilbert Family Foundation’s newly announced Seed and Bloom program in partnership with United States Artists will give $150,000 to artist-run businesses and community organizations like Norwest Gallery of Art, House of Jit, and Sidewalk Detroit. 

    The funding will be distributed as $75,000 in the first year, $50,000 for the second year, and $25,000 in the third year. Grantees will also receive business coaching and resources to help them grow their artistic practices. 

    “Artists are entrepreneurs and innovators. Their art not only helps us think differently about beauty, humanity, and society, it also catalyzes deeper social connections across our city,” said Gilbert Family Foundation Executive Director Laura Grannemann. “Through Seed and Bloom: Detroit, we aim to expand access to neighborhood-based art by supporting artists and their organizations with technical assistance, capital, and more.”

    Norwest Gallery of Art owner and Womxnhouse Detroit founder Asia Hamilton tells Metro Times she hopes to secure a new location for Womxnhouse. The residency program previously brought together cohorts of women and nonbinary artists who filled Hamilton’s childhood home with art installations. The residency was put on hold in 2023 but Hamilton is plotting a comeback for either this year or 2025.

    Hamilton says she has been talking with Nour Ballout who runs artist residency Habibi House about purchasing a collaborative space together that would be used for both Womxnhouse and Habibi House artists.

    She also has plans to eventually purchase a bigger space for Norwest Gallery, which she currently leases in the Grandmont Rosedale neighborhood.

    “My goal this year is to do things differently,” she says. “I’m going to invest the money into my business so the business can make more money. We’re going to have more programming in the space — paid events, classes, summer camps.”

    Danielle Eliska Lyle’s Neighborhood Bodega production company, which focuses on telling stories about women and the Black diaspora, is also one of the selected projects for Seed and Bloom. 

    “Neighborhood Bodega is a multimedia production house committed to telling stories about women and Black culture/the Black Diaspora,” the filmmaker tells Metro Times. “The focus will be on strengthening the foundation and momentum of the production company by producing narrative works as well as encouraging organic efforts for a collective that fosters working relationships for a Black and brown film crew.” 

    Other projects chosen for Seed and Bloom include Halima Afi Cassells’s apparel swap meetup the Free Market of Detroit, Garage Cultural, BULK Space, Tiff Massey Studios, and filmmaker Juanita Anderson’s Indija Productions.

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    Randiah Camille Green

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