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Sweetwater's annual MAVUNO Festival being held virtually and outdoors | TribLIVE.com
Sewickley Herald

Sweetwater's annual MAVUNO Festival being held virtually and outdoors

Dillon Carr
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Courtesy WQED
The Tuskegee Airmen Memorial, located in Sewickley Cemetery.
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Photo Courtesy of Sweetwater Center for the Arts
Brett C. Wormley’s "A Reflection on Justice" was originally showcased in a 2011 exhibition. The artist’s statement at the time: "This piece is called a reflection on justice because it points at the faults in our judicial system. Inspired by the execution (state murder) of Troy Davis, this art, focuses on attorneys just trying to close caseloads and not paying attention to the lives they destroy."
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Photo Courtesy of Sweetwater Center for the Arts
Mary Hakim Martin’s "Transcending Tragedy" is a ceramic piece that was first showcased during a 2016 exhibition. The artist’s statement at the time: "Transcending Tragedy is part of the Round Dream Series. It is a testament to the Trayvon Martin tragedy that continues to impact the African American community in ways beyond our comprehension. The media images centered around his death will forever be embedded in our collective memory. The piece incorporates Ghanaian Adinkra symbols of justice and the presence of God. These symbols are used as a coded language meant to counter the negative images that overwhelm our psyche. The birds are spiritual symbols positioned in a protective arc that surrounds Trayvon. The patterns pay homage to his life and act as a reminder of the injustices that we continue to endure."
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Photo Courtesy of Sweetwater Center for the Arts
This is a mixed media art piece by Lynne B. It originally appeared in a Sweetwater Center for the Arts exhibition in 2016. The artist’s statement from then: “‘You People.’ This expression is intended by the speaker as an indicative of racism and condescension when used in dialogue or spoken about those of a race different from the speaker’s, or of discrimination of an ethnic or religious group based on interchangeable situations. As innocent Black people from 8 to 80 years of age are murdered by America’s racist, militarized police, the people’s wish to live unmolested and free in a country that claims to be God-fearing and just is confronted on a daily basis.”
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Kristina Serafini | Tribune-Review
St. Matthews AME Church, Sewickley

The Sweetwater Center for the Arts is taking its annual festival that showcases Black art and culture online and outside.

The center’s 24th annual MAVUNO Festival of African American Arts and Culture, which runs from Oct. 10 to Nov. 7, will offer a self-guided walking tour of African Americans’ role in Sewickley. The festival will also include an online, virtual art exhibition.

Barbara Pontello, Sweetwater’s chairwoman, said she’s excited for the tour to highlight “the art and history of African Americans in Sewickley and the region.”

“It’s a fascinating look at the rich and vibrant role they played in making this ‘small corner of Pittsburgh’ into a gem of a town,” she said.

For the tour, participants can download a mobile app that guides them to 12 landmarks throughout the borough. Each stop will have a description to read and a video to watch. It kicks off at the Tuskegee Airmen Memorial in Sewickley Cemetery.

The memorial, touted as the largest of its kind in the country, honors around 100 Tuskegee Airmen from Western Pennsylvania. Of those, eight were from Sewickley, according to the literature attached to the tour guide.

The two-mile tour then takes participants to churches, businesses and other Black meeting places established throughout Sewickley, including Smitty’s Bar on Walnut Street (now the site of Studio B Interior Design) and St. Matthews AME Zion Church on Thorn Street. It ends at the former Walter Raleigh Robinson American Legion on Chadwick Street. It was founded in 1922 and named after the first Black man to die as a result of an injury from World War II.

“When faced with challenges they, time after time, joined together to overcome those obstacles,” reads the tour’s website. “When told they were not welcome, they created their own spaces, often establishing organizations that typically only Black communities in large cities were able to support.”

Alex Watrous, Sweetwater’s curator, said she hopes every person in Sewickley takes the tour to see just how “outstanding Sewickley’s Black community is.”

“I would like people to have a greater understanding of Black history overall. We can’t really understand American history if we leave out the African American story,” she said. “We cheat ourselves by only having the narrow view taught in most schools. If we find out about something that happened in the past that weren’t taught about, we should research it to find out more, then wonder what else we don’t know.”

Watrous helped put together the tour, but she is also the curator for the center’s “Black Art Matters: Revisiting 10 years of MAVUNO Exhibitions” exhibition. The show, which will be virtual since the gallery is closed, will feature works from Black artists whose art has been showcased by the center over the 10 years.

Watrous said the name hearkens to Black Lives Matter protests that erupted this year after George Floyd, a Black man, was killed by a white police officer in Minneapolis. She said the center looked for a way to remind people to listen to the voices of Black artists.

“Black artists have a story to tell that is specific to their experience and they have been telling that story for decades. It is our job to listen and consider their expression in full context,” Watrous said.

A prominent theme, therefore, will revolve around social justice.

Some of those pieces include Brett C. Wormsley’s “A Reflection On Justice,” which was showcased in a 2011 exhibition. The piece depicts how many lives are affected when injustices are carried out on people of color. Other pieces include Mary Hakim Martin’s “Transcending Tragedy” and “You People” by Lynne B.

The exhibition will come online Oct. 10 at Sweetwatercenter.org.

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Categories: Local | Sewickley Herald
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