Njaimeh Njie | |
---|---|
Born | 1988 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
Nationality | American |
Education | Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri |
Website | www.njaimehnjie.com |
Njaimeh Njie (born 1988, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is an American photographer, collagist, filmmaker, and installation artist documenting Black experiences through community-centered, archival, and oral history projects. [1] [2]
Njaimeh Njie was born and raised in Pittsburgh, PA, where she lives and works. [3]
She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Film and Media Studies (2010) from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, [4] and a Master of Education in Secondary Education from the University of Missouri–St. Louis. [5]
Njaimeh Njie's TED Talk "Recording Our History Matters" was delivered at TEDxPittsburghWomen in December 2019. [6] She was an Artist-in-Residence at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University, [7] and a Scholar-In-Residence (Spring 2020) at the Chatham University Women's Institute. [2] Her publication This Is Where We Find Ourselves (2021), an archival project documenting the impacts of covid-19 and historical inequities on Pittsburgh's area neighborhoods, was commissioned by the Heinz Foundations. [8] [9] Njie joined Fountainhead, Miami, Artist-in-Residence's cohort in August 2021. [10]
Njie was a visual editor at Belt Magazine. [11] She has contributed to the photography journal Fraction Magazine about her bodies of work: City on a Hill, in which she produced a series of public art murals around Hill District, a historic neighborhood in Pittsburgh, and This Is Where We Find Ourselves, respectively. [12] [1] [9]
The video installation Did you get everything?, was presented at Mattress Factory, in 2021, part of the group show making home here alongside fellow artists Naomi Chambers, Gavin Andrew Benjamin, Justin Emmanuel Dumas, and Harrison Kinnane Smith. [13] [14] The exhibition combined collage, material culture, sound, and video installation to narrate everyday stories of Black Americans in Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania. [15]
Njie filmed and edited Across the Walls, a documentary film depicting the life stories of women impacted by the justice system for decades long after receiving a sentence with no parole in the state of Pennsylvania. The 22-minute piece gathered sound recordings, archival and contemporary footage, as well as interviews with Avis Lee and Paulette Carrington, two advocates previously incarcerated for forty years. The film was commissioned by the 58th Carnegie International (2022), a contemporary art triennial organized by the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. [16]
In 2023, she presented the solo exhibition Flight Plans at Carlow University Art Gallery, Pittsburgh. Through photo montage, installation, sound components, and language, the show revolved around Black liberation and Afrofuturism aesthetics and culture. Artworks in the gallery paid homage to jazz musicians Maxine Sullivan, writers Toni Morrison and Virginia Hamilton, as well as visual art Alisha Wormsley, among others. [17] [18] [19]
Njaimeh Njie's photographic work is featured in the collections of the Pérez Art Museum Miami, Florida and the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. [20]
Njie was awarded the 2019 Artist of the Year by the Pittsburgh City Paper and the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts 2018 Emerging Artist of the Year. [4] [21]
Lawrence Charles Weiner was an American conceptual artist. He was one of the central figures in the formation of conceptual art in the 1960s. His work often took the form of typographic texts, a form of word art.
Greater Pittsburgh is the metropolitan area surrounding the city of Pittsburgh in Western Pennsylvania, United States. The region includes Allegheny County, Pittsburgh's urban core county and economic hub, and seven adjacent Pennsylvania counties: Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Fayette, Lawrence, Washington, and Westmoreland in Western Pennsylvania, which constitutes the Pittsburgh, PA Metropolitan Statistical Area MSA as defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget.
Elizabeth Catlett, born as Alice Elizabeth Catlett, also known as Elizabeth Catlett Mora was an American and Mexican sculptor and graphic artist best known for her depictions of the Black-American experience in the 20th century, which often focused on the female experience. She was born and raised in Washington, D.C., to parents working in education, and was the grandchild of formerly enslaved people. It was difficult for a black woman at this time to pursue a career as a working artist. Catlett devoted much of her career to teaching. However, a fellowship awarded to her in 1946 allowed her to travel to Mexico City, where she settled and worked with the Taller de Gráfica Popular for twenty years and became head of the sculpture department for the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas. In the 1950s, her main means of artistic expression shifted from print to sculpture, though she never gave up the former.
The Mattress Factory is a contemporary art museum located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was a pioneer of site-specific installation art and features permanent installations by artists Yayoi Kusama, James Turrell, and Greer Lankton. The museum's roof itself is a light art installation and part of Pittsburgh's Northside evening skyline.
The Heinz Endowments is a philanthropic organization in the United States, and was formed with the combined support from two smaller, private foundations: the Howard Heinz Endowment and the Vira I. Heinz Endowment. It awards more than $60 million annually in grants to a range of nonprofit organizations.
Renée Stout is an American sculptor and contemporary artist known for assemblage artworks dealing with her personal history and African-American heritage. Born in Kansas, raised in Pittsburgh, living in Washington, D.C., and connected through her art to New Orleans, her art reflects this interest in African diasporic culture throughout the United States. Stout was the first American artist to exhibit in the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art.
Elaine A. King is a curator, critic, professor, and editor.
Winifred Ann Lutz is an American sculptor, fiber artist, and environmental artist known for her site-integrated installations and handmade paper-making. She is recognized as a key innovator in the field of hand papermaking as an art form. She is currently the Laura Carnell Professor Emeritus in sculpture at the Tyler School of Art at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Robert L. Qualters, Jr. is an American painter, installation artist and printmaker based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His work encompasses traditional painting, as well as murals, and collaborations with other Pittsburgh-based artists across several disciplines. He is associated with the Bay Area Figurative Movement of Representational Painting.
Xaviera Simmons is an American contemporary artist. She works in photography, performance, painting, video, sound art, sculpture, and installation. Between 2019 and 2020, Simmons was a visiting professor and lecturer at Harvard University. Simmons was a Harvard University Solomon Fellow from 2019 to 2020. Simmons has stated in her lectures and writings that she is a descendant of Black American enslaved persons, European colonizers and Indigenous persons through the institution of chattel slavery on both sides of her family's lineage.
Jennie C. Jones is an African-American artist living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Her work has been described, by Ken Johnson, as evoking minimalism, and paying tribute to the cross-pollination of different genres of music, especially jazz. As an artist, she connects most of her work between art and sound. Such connections are made with multiple mediums, from paintings to sculptures and paper to audio collages. In 2012, Jones was the recipient of the Joyce Alexander Wien Prize, one of the biggest awards given to an individual artist in the United States. The prize honors one African-American artist who has proven their commitment to innovation and creativity, with an award of 50,000 dollars. In December 2015 a 10-year survey of Jones's work, titled Compilation, opened at the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston, Texas.
Ayanah Moor is a conceptual artist working in print, video, mixed media, and performance. Her work addresses contemporary popular culture by interrogating identity and vernacular aesthetics. Much of her works center on hip-hop culture, American politics, black vernacular and gender performance.
Henry Taylor is an American artist and painter who lives and works in Los Angeles, California. He is best known for his acrylic paintings, mixed media sculptures, and installations.
Barbara Luderowski was an American artist and museum administrator, who founded the Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and served as the museum's president and co-director.
Kim Beck is an American artist living and working in New York City and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Beck works in drawing, sculpture, installation, photography, printmaking and multimedia, focusing her attention on subjects that might otherwise be overlooked. She is especially known for her artist's books and public artworks dealing with the subject of environment and landscape.
vanessa german is an American sculptor, painter, writer, activist, performer, and poet based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Paula Wilson is an African American "mixed media" artist creating works examining women's identities through a lens of cultural history. She uses sculpture, collage, painting, installation, and printmaking methods such as silkscreen, lithography, and woodblock. In 2007 Wilson moved from Brooklyn, New York, to Carrizozo, New Mexico, where she currently lives and works with her woodworking partner Mike Lagg.
Alisha B. Wormsley is an interdisciplinary artist and cultural producer. Her work is about collective memory and the synchronicity of time, specifically through the stories of women of color. She states her work is "the future, and the past, and the present, simultaneously."
Angel Delgado is a Cuban visual artist who lives in Long Beach, California.
Kennedy Yanko is an American sculptor, painter and installation artist known for working with "paint skins" and found metal. Yanko sources discarded objects and other material from salvage yards and manipulates or modifies their form, shape, or structure into her vision. Her abstract work draws upon surrealism, abstract expressionism and physical austerities and her background in performance art.