ArtsXchange Asks ‘Whose America Is It, Anyway?’ In New Exhibition

Alexis Childress,
Generational Wealth

Courtesy of ArtsXchange

ArtsXchange Community Cultural Center in East Point raises a compelling question in the title of its new juried exhibition, “Whose America Is It, Anyway?” The Center dedicates itself to empowering artists and activists, and for the new show, offered the open-ended question to Atlanta artists whose unique perspectives might bring insight into the country’s turbulent social, political and racial struggles of today. On view through Sept. 30 at ArtsXchange’s Jack Sinclair Gallery, the exhibition features prize-winners selected by juror Dr. Fahamu Pecou. He joined “City Lights” host Lois Reitzes via zoom along with Gallery curators Ric Washington and Lisa Tuttle to talk about the selected works and the conversations they inspired.

“We started out with the question of, ‘Whose America is this, anyway,’ and this came right on the heels of the insurrection on Jan. 6,” said Washington. “We thought that this would be an appropriate time to have artists weigh in on this experience because so many people were so strongly claiming ownership of this country…. We put a prospective out, leaving just enough room in there for the artists to form their own point of view – not wanting to refer to any specific movement, any particular event that was happening, and I was interested to see what reaction we would get from the artists.”

Washington continued, “I thought we would get submissions about BLM, about the Trump Insurrection, about George Floyd’s murder, and other current events that were turning the world upside down. I was pleased to see we got that and so much more.”



“Whose America Is It, Anyway” is the second juried show organized by ArtsXchange. Tuttle and Washington set up this year’s extension of the Center’s July festival, Reimagine Democracy: Art and Social Justice. Dr. Pecou served as juror, identifying first, second and third prize winners among the artists featured.

Ronnie Phillips, Lost and Found (Courtesy of ArtsXchange)

Pecou’s selection for first place, Alexis Childress, presented a piece titled “Generations of Wealth.” “This is a digital collage, a digital photograph that shows a pair of hands that have gold dipping from the hands, but the hands also appear to be bound at the wrists by thin white wire,” Pecou said. “That piece just really struck me. It made me think about the untapped potential that, particularly, a lot of Black people experience in this country, where you are bound up, limited based on racial perception. It really struck me that in this very simple way, the artist was able to capture the essence of having so much to offer but being bound up at the same time.”

Second place winner Johnathan Banks contributed his photographic work “The Possibilities,” and third prize went to Joe Dreher, also known as JOEKINGATL, with his piece “Remnants.” “Three selected awardees in the show, each presented a piece that, I think, really reflected themselves, and also… we can see ourselves in the work,” said Washington. “Especially the Joe Dreher piece, for me, it looks like fragments of a man. The face is torn apart, almost like a Romare Bearden collage, on tar paper. But it’s just haunting. It’s a haunting reminder of the divergent history that we’re talking about.”

Washington described how the volume of submissions and the size of many of the submitted artworks exceeded what the gallery could display that they chose to let the exhibition spill out into ArtsXchange’s outer hallway. “It’s really a wonderful experience because now you have all of this focused work in the Gallery, and then these larger expressive pieces all up and down the hallway, which really makes for a well-rounded show,” he said.

“Art is the expression. It’s the language that allows us to communicate with each other beyond words,” said Pecou. “So many of us find ourselves silenced for one reason or another, given politics and history… Art becomes the way for us to exist, to affirm, but more importantly, to connect.”

“Whose America Is It, Anyway” is on view at ArtsXchange through Sept. 30. More information on the exhibition can be found at www.artsxchange.org/jack-sinclair-gallery.