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The Evolution of My Art Through Personal Perceptions and Experiences of Racial Disparities

An exhibition still runs that all must have the opportunity to connect with, "The Evolution of My Art Through Personal Perceptions and Experiences of Racial Disparities", undoubtedly, something that a majority of most and even some non-minorities have all experienced, happenings going on in The Armour J. Blackburn Center at Howard University in Washington, DC. The artist and 2007 MFA graduate, Shirley Harris, hails from the streets of California, Orange County to be exact, where in 1998 her art style miraculously changed while interning at a predominantly Hispanic elementary school in Santa Ana, California, from realistic portraiture to geometrically inspired abstract art; it was considered by some as very "ethnic looking".

Although raised in upstate New York, Shirley relocated to California and at the time resided in an area where most were of Caucasian ethnicity and only 1% of African descent. An area amassed by the reality of a white-collar corporate environment. She silently rebuffed the remarks made by one of her former instructors who referred to her geometrically shaped papier images as African masks, but continued the compulsion to create a variety of abstract portraits that she immediately referred to as The Stoic Series. Since its inception Shirley has produced over 100 papier sculpted, canvass painted, paper and collaged images and believes her work is a healing and teaching tool that represents the plight of ancestral spirits.

In undergraduate work, Shirley was an Illustration major, who minored in Afro-Ethnic studies. In 2003 she held her first solo exhibition at her former alma mater, California State University Fullerton, the first exhibition ever held in the Social Sciences and Humanities building, An Ancestral Journey Through Time. Later discarding the paper sculpted images to create canvass painted pieces, and after meeting with representatives from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, she revisited the papier sculpted images which were later exhibited in 2005 Faces of Resilience at the opening of the first African American Resource Center at Cal State Fullerton. Realizing the remarks made from her former instructor was a signal, a vital message soon forced her to acknowledge her African roots, that ultimately led Shirley to the sprawling sidewalks of the Washington, DC metro area to attend one of the most, prestigious, historically black educational institutions in the nation, Howard University.

While in the DC area, Shirley held a four month exhibition at Irvine Valley College in Irvine, California, another alma mater, in 2006 and has continued to exhibit widely in the Washington, D C area at Martin L. King Library, the Children' Studio School, the Studio Gallery and several student exhibitions.

But unlike her earlier pieces, few of the images currently on display, at Howard University shows resemblance to her much earlier works. Both the papier sculpted images and the painted canvasses were amazingly transformed as Shirley vigoursly sought to connect with her African ancestry. At Howard, she delved into the world of Sankofa which signifies that it is okay for one to revisit or remember the past when throughout most of her life it was generally acceptable to forget about the past; the past history of slavery. But the daily newspaper accounts and constant reminders of slavery are ever more present by the recent acknowledgment and public apologies issued by both the State of Maryland and Virginia.   And at Howard evidence in the changes of the papier images that took place can be seen by the crowns that became more taller, broader and more fanciful than shown in previous images. The canvass painted works infused many images on a plane rather than a sole image, indicating a collective entity as the palette became bolder, more vibrant and more vivid, just more in your face, a sign, shouting to the world that Shirley had made that connection and she was humbly proud and her people were humbly proud to be descendants of the continent of Africa. Any questions, or interest for speaking engagements, exhibitions, workshops or purchases she may be contacted at:

Shirley Harris
P.O. Box 13844
Silver Spring, MD 20911
Phone: 949-677-4215
E-mail: sashartist@yahoo.com


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