Artist bio

I, Steve A. Prince, am a native of New Orleans, Louisiana, and I currently resides in Williamsburg, Virginia. I am the Director of Engagement and Distinguished Artist in Residence at the Muscarelle Museum at William and Mary. I received my BFA from Xavier University of Louisiana and my MFA in Printmaking and Sculpture from Michigan State University. I am a mixed media artist, master printmaker, lecturer, educator, and art evangelist. I have taught middle school, high school, community college, 4-year public and 4-year private, and conducted workshops internationally in various media. I have worked with several church’s of various denominations across the nation spreading a message of hope and renewal. I work with both two-dimensional and three-dimensional artistic practices while working with virtually every age bracket and multiple ethnicities. I am represented by Eyekons Gallery in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Black Art in America in Columbus, Georgia, and Zucot Gallery in Atlanta, Georgia. I have created several public works including an 8’ x 8’ mixed media work titled “Lemonade: A Picture of America” at William and Mary commemorating the first 3 African American resident students in 1967 at the college, a 15’ stainless steel kinetic sculpture titled “Song for John” located in Hampton, Virginia and a 4’ x 32’ communal woodcut titled, “Links,” commemorating the 400th anniversary of 1619 and the first documented Africans at Point Comfort (now known as Hampton, Virginia.) I have received several honors for my art and scholarship including the 2010 Teacher of the Year award from the City of Hampton. I have shown my art internationally in various solo, group, and juried exhibitions. I have participated in several residencies including Artist in Residence at Segura Arts Center at Notre Dame University, Pyramid Atlantic Art Center in Hyattsville, Maryland, the Atlanta Printmakers Studio, and the University of Iowa to name a few. The New Orleans Jazz Funeral tradition is the philosophical foundation of my work. The Jazz funeral is divided into two parts: the Dirge and the Second Line. The Dirge is the mournful portion of the funeral as musicians create the atmosphere for the witnesses. Once the body is laid to rest, the mournful tune is translated into a celebratory tune called the Second Line. The musicians play 2/4, syncopated music, to charge the atmosphere to celebrate the new life beyond this realm. I believe we can use the tenets of the Dirge and the Second Line to grapple with social issues and concerns. The Dirge is synonymous with the deeper social concerns we must confront daily collectively. If we confront those issues we can experience a Second Line while we are alive. Printmaking and drawing are my primary mediums. In my work, I create a poly-narrative of symbols, metaphors, and designs that challenge the viewer to sift through the work to construct meaning, understanding, and ultimately, prompts for communal action. I believe that making art with a message operates in drawing us closer as a people, is connected to nobility that will never die.

Title

Native Tongue

Medium/Genre

Other

Artist Statement

The image Native Tongue reveals a moment in a spirited church service where the minister is delivering a message and the congregation hears his words not in the natural but in the spirit likened to when the disciples were moved to speak in tongues in the Upper Room. The glow of the Holy Spirt is circulating through the room as mothers, fathers, and children alike receive the word causing some to shout, dance, and express praise. The stained glass symbolically represents the stains of our collective history but also paints a picture of how God kept us through it all generation after generation. Those who were once kings and queens walked through doors of no return and placed on bottoms of ships, broke free from bondage and leaders rose to guide the people to the promised land, many casualties along the way, and the cry for freedom remains on our tongues. The church is the site for both our physical and spiritual freedom, it is the space where we gather to praise God and daily die, speaking in one tongue.

How it fits into contest

1 Peter 3:8-9; 8 Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another, love as brethren, be pitiful, be courteous: 9 Not rendering evil for evil, or railing: but contrariwise blessing; knowing that ye are there unto called, that ye should inherit a blessing.”

In these perilous times in which we live amidst foundations eroding and hate speak flowing through the air circulating on channels of technology. It is even more imperative that we find safe spaces of worship, edification, challenging, remembering, studying, and building tables of peace, love, and restoration.

Credits

The teachings, and tenderness of my mother, raising me and my siblings. The little child in the composition playing with building blocks with the gentle touch of the mother upon his head is me and the love my mother displayed daily, training me to love myself, and my neighbor.

How to Purchase this Artwork

Native Tongue, 18” x 24”, Linoleum Cut on Paper, $1,500. Contact me through; www.steveprincestudio.com

Other Goods & Services Available from this Artist

I showcase my artwork internationally in gallery and museum shows. I am an avid lecturer, and lay minister delivering a message with my artwork. I conduct community based projects and programs utilizing art as a tool to draw communities together closer to grapple with deep set issues in society. I travel internationally to share my gifts and I have been commissioned to create artwork in 2-D and 3-D expressions.

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