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The Black Arts Movement in Oakland and Berkeley

The Black Arts Movement was a vibrant creative period that has had a lasting cultural impact on the East Bay.

Ever so often a social and political movement merges with an art movement to create a uniquely vibrant environment that impacts communities for generations. The Black Arts Movement that began in 1967, and reached its zenith in the early 1980s, was such a cultural moment in this country. Two social/political movements would greatly impact the decade: African independence and American Civil Rights.

As the Civil Rights Movement in America grew to gain international attention, young and creative people took an increasingly more active role. Their study and acceptance of Pan-Africanism, their identification with the words of Malcolm X and James Baldwin, and their ardent call for Black Power shifted the movement from a conciliatory call for justice to a more forceful call to political action and radical self-determination. Local artists responded by embracing African cultures, rhythms, and design motifs. This was exemplified in their dress, hairstyles, art themes, writing, and performance.

As the Black Arts Movement grew, galleries and cultural centers sprouted all over the East Bay in storefronts, church basements, and private homes. African Americans were hungry for representation, and African American artists took it upon themselves to make art that expressed what they were feeling politically and personally. People were turning away from images that demeaned the Black body and intellect, images that most had grown up absorbing. They were rejecting assimilation to the mainstream society that had maligned, repressed, and imperiled the Black community for centuries. People sought spaces to gather to create and share art and information. The cooperative spirit of the time echoed an earlier Black arts movement, the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s.

Artists were integral to educating the African American community about their history, culture, and value to American society. They played an active part in community empowerment, and their art, in all of its variety, reflected it. Emory Douglas, Black Panther Party Minister of Culture, and Tarika Lewis (the first woman to join the Black Panther Party, using the name Matilaba) contributed art to the Black Panther newspaper, creating imagery that helped brand the group. The Bay Area Black Artists (BABA) Collective was a group that actively exhibited their works around Oakland and the East Bay during this period. This group included Carol Ward Allen, Casper Banjo, James Lawrence and mixed media artist Marie Johnson. Cartoonist Morrie Turner taught simple lessons in African American history through his “Wee Pals” characters. Many artists were also teachers such as Claude Clark, a longtime instructor at Merritt College. Artists were pushing boundaries in music, literature, and dance, too. Jazz musicians like alto saxophonist John Handy, a graduate of Oakland’s McClymonds High School, were exploring new sonic territory with free jazz. Printmaker and photographer Ted Pontiflet, a California College of Arts and Craft graduate, began his decades-long career during this time. Writers like Ishmael Reed, Reginald Lockett, J. California Cooper, and Marvin X were publishing.

The spirit of the Black Arts Movement is still alive and well in Oakland at venues such as the Malcolm X JazzArts Festival, dance classes at the Malongo Casquelourd Center for the Arts, art openings at Joyce Gordon Gallery, The Art of Living Black annual exhibitions, and the Eastside Arts Alliance.

The Oakland Public Library can help you learn more about this culturally rich period with these books:

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