Public Installation and Online Exhibit: Saturday, November 14, 2020 – Friday, April 30, 2021 | Visit the online gallery.
Virtual Reception: View the virtual gallery reception.
Visit the art installation: Get directions.
Public Art Installation and Online Exhibit
Rhythmix Cultural Works and the City of Alameda present Creating Our Future, a public art installation and virtual reception celebrating the renaming of Alameda’s park formerly known as Jackson Park.
Bringing the artist’s voice to the renaming of Alameda’s first park formerly known as Jackson Park, Rhythmix Cultural Works invited artist Stephen Bruce to curate a temporary art installation to replace the park’s signage during the renaming process. In this important moment of change, the installation will bring together the work of six different African American artists, Stephen Bruce, Abi Mustapha, Andrea McCoy Harvey, Ashlei Reign, Tiffany Conway and Zoë Boston, to create a vision of our future.
The installation will be on display November 14, 2020 – April 30, 2021 (at the corner of Park Ave & Encinal Avenue: 2430 Encinal Avenue) and is made possible with funding from the City of Alameda and a California Arts Council Creative California Communities grant.
Rhythmix Cultural Works is presenting Creating Our Future as a modification to its originally planned Island City Waterways Art Walk at the same site, which due to the Covid-19 pandemic, has restricted public gatherings. The objective of Island City Waterways is to utilize the arts as a vehicle to celebrate and share Alameda’s unique community history by connecting people to each other and the place they live.
The park renaming effort is being led by a community renaming committee with significant input from the broader Alameda community. The Recreation and Parks Commission will review their name recommendations with a final decision by the Alameda City Council.Park name ideas can be submitted to: ARPD@alamedaca.gov.
Speaker Bio
Rasheed Shabazz is a historian, journalist, and educator. He is a member of Rename Jackson Park, an anti-racist collective focused on education and the removal of white supremacist symbols from public spaces. Rasheed is currently studying for a Masters in City Planning at UC Berkeley. He is writing a book about race and housing and the experiences of African Americans in Alameda.
Artist Bios
Zoë Boston is a multifaceted artist who has been drawing since youth, but did not begin painting until she returned to the West Coast. Born in LA and raised in Upstate NY, she now resides in Oakland, CA.
Zoë’s inspirations come from God, life, love, music, food, and more. She is dedicated to being true to herself, which in-turn, transforms her work into passion on walls and canvas.
Award-winning artist Stephen Bruce’s acid paintings on copper have helped to set the scene on some of the most popular TV shows and movies including: House, Law & Order, Criminal Minds, Californication, Big Bang Theory, The American Housewife, The Avengers, Iron Man 3, Avengers: Endgame, Horrible Bosses and The Social Network. Bruce also takes an active role in inspiring young students to think creatively using the basic principles of art and science.
Tiffany Conway’s visual paintings are the break of generational curses and the door to beautiful beginnings. Overcoming stereotypes and an absentee mother, art has provided Tiffany with the tools to communicate in a way that she was not able to do before. Growing her creativity from life experiences, art has allowed Tiffany to retreat, restore, and express all that she has learned from moving through the world as a Black woman.
Andrea McCoy Harvey is a 48 year-old native of Little Rock, Arkansas by way of Tracy, California. She received her formal art training at the University of Arkansas Pine Bluff, a HBCU, with a BA in Art Education. She is currently obtaining her MFA at the Academy of Art San Francisco. Andrea is a public school Art Teacher for Emery Unified School District. She is an emerging new artist that brings a powerful message with her art: Her portrait series delivers a commanding statement for women of color and women’s empowerment.
Abi Mustapha is a Sierra Leonean-American artist. Her work is primarily focused on large scale portraiture and illustration inspired by examining the beauty of cross cultural diversity. Her art examines the complexity of expression and identity through the creative process; drawing many small details on a large scale. Graphite, charcoal, and oil paint on paper, are her preferred mediums.
Ashlei Reign is a proud Oakland native and well traveled artist. With nineteen countries and counting and a former job as an Oakland police officer, Ashlei has seen a wide range of cultures and communities. Her highly saturated images have the ability to draw your attention and her level of detail in the eyes of her portraits teach you to look beyond differences and simply connect. Ashlei has had no formal art training but she continues to surround herself with other artists and mentors that contribute to her artistic journey.