Culture
LittleVillageMag.com
Come On In, Be Yourself
I
Andreâ Wright approaches the challenges of liberation one conversation at a time.
t was the kids who came up with the name. When designer and Humanize My Hoodie co-founder Andreâ Wright accepted an offer from Revival owner Sheila Davisson to make use of her then-vacant Ped Mall space, he didnât have a name in mind. All he had was a vision to âreally show this community what inclusion is.â And in the months that he and his team were there, through December 2020, that lesson hit. Although the space wasnât solely focused on youth, young Black creatives became the core of its user base. âThey got a chance to see constructive Black people,â Wright said. âMy hope was that they would come in and be inspired.â They clearly were. In the midst of the creativity and community spurred there, they began referring to the place in terms of what it had come to feel like for them: a Black Liberation Space. And they werenât the only ones who were inspired. Filmmaker and University of Iowa MFA candidate Trevon Jakaar Coleman crafted a tight documentary of the space with the same name; itâs been getting attention as it makes the festival rounds. The film is an homage to the work that went on there and the people it touched. At just 12 minutes, it leaves you wanting moreâwhich is appropriate, because so does the space itself. There is a sense, both in watching the documentary and in speaking with Wright, that there is so much more ahead for this idea, and for all of the other ideas swirling in Wrightâs inventive mind. For now, Wright has been meeting with some of the students who frequented the Black Liberation Space at various spots in downtown Iowa City, and theyâre Jordan Sellergren / Little Village
working on projects in their own homes (see design spread, next four pages). He sees himself as a Professor X to the young people he works with. âI get to help them understand what their talents are and how to use them,â he said. Heâs determined to continue to source opportunities for them, to help them discover ways to work within the field of art. âThis is what kids and other adults are telling me,â he said. âAs much joy as this community offers, some people donât feel the same, because they are excluded from the table.â Wright saw the Black Liberation Space as âa chance to fight back ⌠a form of protest, but in a way that was
BY GENEVIEVE TRAINOR
WH: Lessons & Visions on Independent Space Pt. 1, FilmSceneâChauncey, Iowa City, Saturday, Nov. 6 at 10 a.m., Choose Your Price-$25 Filmmaker Spotlight: Black Liberation Space, FilmSceneâChauncey, Iowa City, Sunday, Nov. 14 at 6:30 p.m., $5
liberation and what that means for us?â Heâs feeling more optimistic about that possibility now. As he searches for a new location for a reiteration of his vision, heâs also refining and heightening it.
âWE BUILD RELATIONSHIPS MORE THAN BEING AN INCUBATOR. AND THOSE RELATIONSHIPS LET US KNOW HOW WE CAN HELP EACH OTHER.â more empowering.â âIt was almost like a 3D visual of us humanizing ourselves in the moment,â he said. But it wasnât exhibitionist. In fact, he said, they never even opened the front door of the space. Everyone entered and left through the back door. It was of, by and for the community it served, not a showcase for the world at large. Wright recalled the waves of support that have run through activist circles in the wake of various tragedies in the Black community, but he remembers them as transitory, performative. âIt upset me to see people fall back from something that was so passionate to me,â he said of the way those waves receded. He wondered, âAre we ever going to get liberation here? Are we ever going to be able to have a real conversation about
âThis would serve as kind of an incubator for different kinds of services,â he said, speaking excitedly about a barber, for example, who had set up shop in the original space. âWe build relationships,â he clarified, âmore than being an incubator. And those relationships let us know how we can help each other.â Wright wants to build a place âfor our people to have a place of belonging,â he saidâand he wants it to be in the heart of downtown, in a place where it can have the most impact and in a way that allows the users of the space âto actually do action, not just talk about things.â He sees opportunities for community development, for financial literacy, for providing jobs. âIf weâre not being vocal about these things, the conversation wonât be had,â he said. Ultimately, it comes down to discerning the best way to help in each individual situation. And to do that, you have to know people deeply. âHow do you treat your friends? How do you treat your best friend? You learn,â Wright said. âI donât think we spend enough time learning other people.â Genevieve Trainor is arts editor and publisher at Little Village. Check out the Black Liberation Space student design spread on the next four pages LITTLEVILLAGEMAG.COM/LV300 November 2021 43









