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OTP Remembers Augusta Savage on 60th Anniversary of Her Death

Legendary Sculptor associated with Harlem Renaissance Passed March 27, 1962 in New York at 70

  • By The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

Augusta Savage, original name Augusta Christine Fells, (born February 29, 1892, Green Cove Springs, Florida, U.S.—died March 26, 1962, New York, New York), was an American sculptor and educator who battled racism to secure a place for African American women in the art world.


Augusta Fells began modeling figures from the red-clay soil of her native Florida at an early age. When just 15 years old, she married John T. Moore in 1907 and had her only child, Irene, in 1908. After Moore died a few years later, Augusta moved to West Palm Beach, Florida, in 1915. About that time she married James Savage, but she divorced him in the early 1920s and kept his name.

William Artis (1914–1977), A Mother’s Love, 1963. Atlanta University Art Collection


Once she discovered a good source for clay, Savage thrived artistically in West Palm Beach, receiving local encouragement and prizes. She moved to Jacksonville, Florida, hoping to make a living by executing commissioned busts of the city’s well-to-do African Americans. When that plan failed, she left her daughter with her parents in Florida and moved to New York City to study art. In 1921 she enrolled at Cooper Union in the four-year sculpture course, but her instructors quickly waived many of the classes in light of her talent. She graduated in three years.


In 1923 Savage became the focus of a racial scandal involving the French government and the American arts community. She was among some 100 young American women selected to attend a summer program at Fontainebleau, outside Paris, but her application was subsequently refused by the French on the basis of her race. The American sculptor Hermon A. MacNeil was the only member of the committee to denounce the decision, and he invited Savage to study with him in an attempt to make amends. Also in 1923 Savage married for the third and final time, but her husband, Robert L. Poston, died the next year. Following this period, Savage worked in steam laundries to earn money to care for her family and to save for studies in Europe.


In the 1920s Savage received commissions to sculpt portrait busts of W.E.B. Du Bois and black nationalist Marcus Garvey; both pieces were hailed for their power and dynamism. On the strength of these works and especially the poignant Gamin (1929)—a portrait bust of a streetwise boy and one of Savage’s few extant pieces—she received a Julius Rosenwald Fellowship that enabled her finally to study in Paris in 1929–31.

A bronze souvenir replica of Augusta Savage’s Lift Every Voice and Sing purchased at the 1939 World’s Fair in New York City. University of North Florida, Thomas G. Carpenter Library, Special Collections and Archives, Eartha M. M. White Collection.


The Great Depression brought art sales to a virtual standstill, however, and so when she returned to New York she began to teach art, founding the Savage Studio of Arts and Crafts in Harlem in 1932. In 1934 Savage became the first African American elected to the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors (now National Association of Women Artists). In 1937 she became the first director of the Harlem Community Art Center, which was established under the Works Progress Administration Federal Art Project (WPA/FAP). The art centre in Harlem played a crucial role in the development of many young black artists. Savage also fought successfully for the inclusion of black artists in WPA projects.


In the late 1930s Savage was commissioned to create a sculpture for the 1939 New York World’s Fair. The piece, The Harp, inspired by James Weldon Johnson’s poem “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” became one of her best known. Unfortunately, it and many other works by Savage were never cast in durable materials and were later lost or destroyed. Savage opened a gallery specializing in art by African Americans, but it did not survive for long. She retired from art in the 1940s, moving to a farm in Saugerties, New York.
Images https://womenatthecenter.nyhistory.org

Fan-“TAZ”-tic Artist Mourned in NYC & New Mexico

Brooklyn Homage to a Leo Woman

by Joanna “Jo-Jo” Williams
Shontez Denise Morris was my schoolmate at Boys & Girls H.S. (1992-1996) and maid of honor at my wedding. She introduced me to my husband, was spiritual nurturer to my two children and kept me mindful through 30 years of friendship, starting from P.S./I.S. 308 magnate school on Quincy Street in the 7th and 8th grades. She always kept a journal and was a gifted creative writer.

Shontez “Taz” Morris, August 15, 1978 (Stuttgart, Germany) – March 17, 2022 (Santa Fe, New Mexico)


We were awkward, skinny, nerdy girls, bullied and teased, and we had a lot in common.
I could not have imagined back when we were teens that my shy, gifted friend — an honor roll student with a penchant for musing and dreaming; a love for science and the highest regard for animals and creatures, large and small — would evolve into the promise of her Leo sign: regal, queenly, royal, tenacious, and fierce.


I could not imagine that a generation later, she would be a lioness owning her center, her space. She knocked away obstacles that that got in her way. As a corrections officer she never used her weapon. Instead, she said she relied on Truth and Respect as her armor.

Left: Boys & Girls H.S. 1996 Graduation Note to Friend. Top: This Boys & Girls High School 1996 yearbook photo of Shontez Morris was taken just before she began a 30-year search for visibility and definition.


Once Shontez came into her own, her heart grew bigger, and her soul stronger, giving her the courage to exercise her gifts as an artist in Santa Fe, New Mexico where she explored life-long interests: public speaking, interior designing, curating art shows, producing events, and impressing all with her talent for making cartoon voices and animal sounds. My sister who I affectionately called Cat sister (we shared a love for cats), could have been a voice-over artist or stand-up comedian. She had the gift to make people smile and laugh.

At a Santa Fe costume fashion event, Taz dressed as Bast, the ancient Egyptian deity worshiped as a lioness. Taz apparently connected metaphorically with Bast’s designation as goddess of protection and bringer of good health. She designed the make-up and created the headdress.


Shontez was born on a U.S. military base in Stuttgart, Germany, August 15,1978. She and her brother, Andrew Morris Jr, were later raised on Chauncey Street and Malcolm X. Blvd in Brooklyn by single mom Anita Morris Bennett.

“Shonie”, as her mom nicknamed her, credits her grandparents for supporting her interests in community activism and humanitarianism.
I am not yet capable of articulating the depth of my gratitude to her for how much of herself she gave to me and to others. She was always the counselor, always the volunteer, always the worker.


Taz retired early from corrections after 11 years to pursue a different path. She moved to Atlanta for a brief time and then to Sante Fe, New Mexico to pursue her true passion as a painter and visual artist, and then entrepreneur, transforming her correction officer training into a lucrative security business. She only had one friend when she arrived, but soon after the entire Santa Fe community of creative artists came to know her.


My friend was in a life-long search for her center and became THE center of a southwestern arts & culture community. She was phenomenal. I am so glad to have known her. Her tenacious spirit and positive light will be missed.


A memorial is set for next week, Tuesday, March 29 in Santa Fe, NM. It will be livestreamed on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/674679190313508
Here in Brooklyn, preliminary plans are for a celebration of her life in the near future. Event updates can be found on www.ourtimepress.com. To hear Shontez tell her story, visit:
“Portrait of Taz” on
www.ourtimepress.com
youtu.be/od6ZdRhSegw
YouTube: Shontez Morris Tells Her
Story: youtu.be/-lTKwcQQG2I

Ukraine war creating a child refugee almost every second: UNICEF

Humanitarian Aid
Almost one child per second in Ukraine is becoming a refugee of the war, UN humanitarians said on Tuesday, as the total number of people who have now fled the country since the Russian invasion began, passed three million.
“We have now reached three million mark in terms of movements of people out of Ukraine to neighbouring countries. And among these people there are some 157,000 third-country nationals,” said Paul Dillon, spokesperson for the International Organization for Migration (IOM), speaking in Geneva.
Some 1.5 million children have now joined the exodus from Ukraine, at a rate of just under one per second, since the Russian invasion began on 24 February.
“Every day, over the past 20 days, in Ukraine more than 70,000 children have become refugees. That’s every minute, 55 children fleeing the country,” said James Elder, spokesperson for the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

Trafficking fears
Highlighting that nine in 10 of those fleeing unrelenting violence in Ukraine are women and children, Mr. Elder warned that youngsters are prey to traffickers, as they arrive in unfamiliar new surroundings.
“To give a sense of the border that I used to visit – the main border, Medyka,  Poland to Ukraine – it is scores of people standing around buses and minivans calling out names of capital cities – or at least it was a week ago – people getting onto those,” he said. “The vast, vast majority of course are people with wonderful intentions and great generosity, but there is no doubt given what we understand of trafficking in Europe, that that remains a very, very grave issue.”
The development follows a warning from the UN Secretary-General, who on Monday said that Russia’s military offensive against civilians was “reaching terrifying proportions”.

Mariupol horror
In Mariupol, humanitarians warned that the situation in the port city has deteriorated further, after further heavy Russian bombardment.
Hundreds of thousands of people are being “suffocated” by a lack of supplies and are unable to flee the city, besieged by Russian forces.  
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Tuesday described the situation as “dire and desperate”.
“The bottom line here is that hundreds of thousands of people remain without aid today,” said spokesperson Ewan Watson. “They are unable to leave the city today and they are essentially being suffocated in this city right now with no aid.”
Mr. Watson also confirmed that “some vehicles …were able to leave the city yesterday. The ICRC was not involved in that evacuation of people. But what I would say is that is really a drop in the ocean.”
Amid reports that families are being forced to gather water from streams and that fights have broken out over food, Mr. Watson urged the Ukrainian and Russian authorities to find a solution so that aid can reach the city’s people.
The ICRC spokesperson also announced that the Organization intended to evacuate people from the besieged northeastern city of Sumy on Tuesday, using 30 buses.

UN stepping up aid
Across the country, UN humanitarians are delivering lifesaving aid where they have access. But UNICEF’s Mr. Elder reported “indiscriminate attacks time and again on critical infrastructure, particularly water has been targeted.
“Anecdotally from those colleagues there, we know of families who are undoing all heaters to take water coolant out as a last resort, as something to drink.”

What’s Going On – 3/24

THE WORLD
President Joe Biden travels to Europe this week to caucus with NATO and EU partners in an effort to avert a hotter war between Russia and Ukraine, or the beginning of WWIII. Europe is resembling the war-torn Middle East. Belarus, a Ukraine neighbor could join the Russian war by week’s end. Too much bellicose talk for comfort or sanity. President Biden talks about deploying more US troops to NATO countries. Brinkmanship, heating war stories is really concerning for a world not fully recovered from the war on Covid19.

In February, Russia arrested Brittney Griner, 31, an African American professional basketball player for possession of drug paraphernalia. A member of the Phoenix Mercury team in the USA, Griner plays pro ball for a Russian team during the American WNBA offseason for more revenues. Her alleged crime is punishable for 10 years of incarceration. Women basketball players’ salaries seldom climb above $1 million. Russians extended her detention until May 19. She is an unwitting pawn in the game of two world power players.

THE NATION
If time permits, watch history unfold this week while President Biden’s Black Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson undergoes US Senate Judicial Committee scrutiny, replete with Republican irrelevant queries and distractions in an attempt to undermine her credibility. She has been before this Senate Committee three times. She was a picture of aplomb on Day 1. Reminding viewers that she was not being examined by a group of her peers.


Governors in all states have relaxed face masks, once considered necessary to combat the perilous virus, which seems to be pandemic of the past. Why are both Pfizer and Moderna requesting emergency approval from FDA and CDC for a fourth COVID 19 dose? I don’t get it. Spring break brings out the crowds. April 2022 hosts three major religious holidays – Passover, Easter and Ramadan – when people will assemble in big numbers.

NEW YORK
The NYS budget is due April 1. The three-power people in the room, Governor Hochul, Senate Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie are gazillions away from agreement. The Legislature wants mega millions more in social network programs. The Governor wants to revisit the bail reform law.
Last week, NYC Mayor Eric Adams visited Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot to discuss solutions to stem the gun violence which plagues those two cities. Gun violence in NYC and Chicago was disproportionately high last weekend.

ELECTIONS: Disgraced former Governor Andrew Cuomo is ready to run for governor and to launch a new political party this year. Last week’s Emerson poll showed him trailing Governor Kathy Hochul by 4 points, in a hypothetical poll. However, 64% of poll respondents indicated that he should not run for any political office again. Ted cruz, lindsay graham – should delete??

BROOKLYN: Early results indicate a large Brian Cunningham victory in the special election for Assembly District 43 in Central Brooklyn, where 3000 votes were counted, with 62% of the vote, besting a group of progressives against Democratic Party chief  Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn’s leadership who got 35 % of the vote. Republican and Conservative Party nominee Mesidor Azor, who got 3% of votes. A Jamaican American, Cunningham succeeds Diana Richardson, current Deputy Brooklyn Borough President.

ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT
FILM: The 94th Academy Awards airs live on ABC-TV on March 27 and will be co-hosted by Wanda Sykes, Amy Schumer and Regina Hall. Oscar 2022 will be produced by African American Will Packer, producer of runaway film hit “Girls Trip” and its sequel and of the “ROOTS” remake. Will Smith garnered key pre-Oscar best actor awards, for his performance in the biopic, King Richard” about parent extraordinaire Richard Williams who created two tennis superstars, Serena and Venus Williams. Denzel Washington is a 2022 Best Actor nominee for his portrayal of Macbeth.
Celebrated actors/philanthropists Samuel L. Jackson and LaTanya Richardson are the People Magazine cover couple with a tagline: “ How My Wife Saved My Life.” Married for 41 years, Sam and LaTonya cut their teeth in NY theater with the NEC, and Woodie King’s New Federal Theater. Sam’s new film “The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey,’ an Apple TV+ mystery about a 91-year-old struggling with dementia, adapted from a Walter Mosley book of the same title.

MEDIA NOTES: Read the Sunday, 3/20 SUPER LAWYERS Advertising Supplement, NY Metro/Top Women with cover girl Lisa E. Davis, Esquire who says “We Need To Tell Other Stories,” about her decades-long battle for inclusion in entertainment and law. Davis is with Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz Entertainment & Sports New York law firm and represents clients and businesses in television, publishing theater and sports, music and film like Spike Lee and Flavor Flav.

FINE ART: The Skoto Gallery’s new exhibit, Lula Mae Blocton, The First Two Decades 1970 to 1980 displays her love/obsession of abstractionism and runs from March 26 to April 30, at 529 West 20 Street, NYC. 212.352.8058 skotogallery.com

NEWSMAKER
Happy Vernal Equinox. Spring is here. Birthday greetings to Aries: AKON; Ivo Philbert, PAYPAL; Ambassador Shirley Barnes; James Brooks, serial entrepreneur; Mariah Carey; Chance The Rapper; retired educator Brenda Clark; Fine artist John Dowell; Melanie Edwards, Rosamond Johnson Foundation; Ruth Ennis; Ronald Guy, Harlem Community Leader; finance and philanthropist Mellody Hobson; Ernest Hopkins, health Executive; Karen Horsford, Rocky Horsford, Jr; actress Jackee; Magic Johnson; Star Jones; Chaka Khan; Martin Lawrence; Pat McConnell; Dr. Leon Merrick, DDS; Eddie Murphy; David Oyelowo; Diana Ross; Ruby Ryles; Jill Scott; Maxwell Sidberry, HS junior; Dedra Tate events curator; David Walker, fundraiser/ events curator; Willie Walker, serial entrepreneur; Pharrell Williams; and culture/politics blogger Gloria Dulan Wilson.

FUNDRAISER
One Hundred Black Men, OHBM, NY will host its 42nd Annual Benefit Gala, A Salute to Excellence, at Jazz At Lincoln Center, Manhattan, on Thursday, March 31 at 6 pm. Gala honorees include Brian Flores, NFL Pittsburgh Steelers; Eric Mower, Mower & Associates; Trayce Parker, UPS; Seth Waugh, PGA of America; Rudy Wynter, National Grid; Yasmin Cornelius, L&M Development Partners; Dan Schulman, PayPal CEO: James Brown, sports journalist, CBS; Liz Velez, Chairman Emeritus, NY Builders Congress; Dr. Greta Strong, Weill-Cornell Weill. For reservations, visit daysoftheonehundred.org

A Harlem-based media strategy consultant, Victoria can be reached at victoria.horsford@gmail.com

Rev. Jesse Jackson Rings NY Stock Exchange Bell with Sharon Bowen, History-Making NYSE Chair

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By Fern E. Gillespie
Rev. Jesse Jackson ended the 25th Annual Rainbow PUSH Wall Street Project Economic Summit as he did 25 years ago, at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) ringing the Closing Bell. Except, this year, Wall Street history was made. He had help ringing the bell –Sharon Bowen, a finance and securities lawyer, who is the board chair of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the first Black woman to gain that prominent role.


Since 2017, Bowen has been a member of the board of directors of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., NYSE’s parent company. Previously, she made history as the first African American to serve as the Commissioner of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. In 2010, Bowen was handpicked by former President Barack Obama to serve as vice-chair and acting chair of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation. Last year, Bowen was appointed to the board of directors of Akamai Technologies, Inc. Born in Chesapeake, Virginia, she holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Virginia and a MBA and law degree from Northwestern University.


“The appointment of Sharon Bowen as chair of the New York Stock Exchange is an indication that the wind is certainly blowing towards equality. We are so proud of her, in that, she eloquently carries the burden of our past, while augmenting our future, knowing better days are ahead,” John A. Graves, Chairman, Citizenship Education Fund and Automotive Project told Our Time Press. “As she greeted us this week on the NYSE floor, our pride was joyfully beaming. Moreover, when Rev. Jackson rung the Closing Bell, for the first time in history, an African American chair was at his side. What a seminal moment!”


The Rainbow PUSH Coalition and Citizenship Education Fund hosted 25th Annual Wall Street Project Economic Summit which included John W. Rogers, Jr., Chairman, Co-CEO & Chief Investment Officer, Ariel Investments and Dr. Alan Greenspan, Former Chairman, Federal Reserve System.


“Since the Wall Street Project began 25 years ago, we have seen considerable changes of African American financial firms participating in major transactions. African American financial firms have played a role in the underwriting of several corporate financial transactions, including initial public offerings, as well as institutional asset management,” explained Graves.  “Prior to Rev. Jesse Jackson challenging the financial market, African American firms such as Ariel Investments, Seibert Williams Shank, Loop Capital, and other minority financial firms were non-existent or not at the table. In addition, thanks to Rev. Jackson suggestion and New York Stock Exchange Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Richard Grasso’s leadership, there are no financial transactions on the national holiday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday as the NYSE and NASDAQ are closed. The ongoing issues are how do we increase African American firms’ participation in financial transactions and how do we improve the African American senior level broker representation at the major investment bankers.”


At the event, Mayor Eric Adams stated his willingness for the New York City to do business with African American financial firms.  “I have said it time and time again: social justice and the prosperity of New York City go hand in hand. We cannot have one without the other,” said Mayor Adams. “My administration knows, we can, and we must do both.” 


The Wall Street Project challenges corporate America to end the multi-billion-dollar trade deficit with minority vendors and consumers while working to ensure equal opportunities for culturally diverse employees, entrepreneurs and consumers.
“We have to teach our children about the Bulls and Bears as it’s essential for their success,” stated Rev. Jackson at the conference. “We must learn the system of capitalism, capital, industry, technology, and deal flow.”