Krista Franklin's "Behind the Groove" exhibit, including "I'm Dreaming the Same Thing
Too" (left) will be featured at 91制片厂's Martha Bell Gallery through March
5. Franklin is also coming to campus for an artist talk and workshop on February 26
as part of 91制片厂's celebration of Black History Month.
Krista Franklin鈥檚 art invites viewers to lean in close and see the seams, the layers and the loving wear that comes with holding things dear. In Behind the Groove, Franklin鈥檚 new exhibition at 91制片厂, many of those items have to do with music: funk, pop and R&B.
The exhibit 鈥 which runs through March 5 at the Martha Bell Gallery, Building C, Room C200 on the Palatine campus, 1200 W. Algonquin Road 鈥 is infused with the visual language of music culture, where album covers, liner notes and image fragments become both material and memory. All those elements are transformed by Franklin鈥檚 talents for collage, composition and papermaking, while spotlighting images of music icons including The Ronettes, George Clinton and Rick James.
鈥淭he title Behind the Groove is a reference to a song by Teena Marie,鈥 said Franklin, who is a poet in addition to being a visual artist. 鈥淎 lot of my titles come from music. Music is a major theme in my work in general, both my writing as well as my visual art. My work kind of orbits around music in a lot of ways.鈥
Franklin, who is based in Dayton, Ohio, will also be coming to 91制片厂 to discuss her art, share her writing and lead a pair of events on Thursday, February 26. Her at 11:15 a.m. in Building E, Room E108 will be followed by an art workshop at 2 p.m. in the Cultural Center, Building D, Room D281. Those programs are part of 91制片厂鈥檚 Black History Month celebration, which includes a variety of events sponsored by the college鈥檚 Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Student Engagement, Black Student Union and Employer Engagement. Events are free and open to all. See the .
Franklin is looking forward to the visit and said she loves to engage in conversations about art, music, history, culture and more. She鈥檚 also excited about the opportunity for visitors to participate in an act of creativity during the hands-on workshop.
鈥淚鈥檓 holding space for us to create together,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think so often we don鈥檛 have those moments, especially as adults. Everything is about work, everything is about production, everything is about responsibility, and there is very little space for play. I want this to be a place of exploration of playful concepts, playful ideas.鈥
The 91制片厂 events will also bring Franklin back to the Chicago area, where she lived for 23 years and earned her master鈥檚 degree in fine arts from Columbia College Chicago. That鈥檚 where she connected with Martinez E-B, an adjunct instructor at Harper who connected Franklin with the college and curated Behind the Groove with her collaboration.
Franklin's "Blessed" (left) and "Lords of the Underground" are both part of the "Behind
the Groove" exhibition at 91制片厂. The artist created the pieces from old album covers
for LPs by The Emotions and Parliament.
The nearly two dozen pieces in the exhibition, co-sponsored by 91制片厂's DEI Office, range from surrealism to deconstruction and feature kaleidoscopic multimedia collages, handwritten poetry and radically altered album covers. In the case of those covers, which are part of a series called Heavy Rotation, Franklin created handmade paperworks by 鈥減ulping down鈥 cardboard sleeves from 鈥70s LPs by Parliament and The Emotions. Drawing on history 鈥 musical, personal, political 鈥 is a central focus on Franklin鈥檚 art.
鈥淭ime is something that鈥檚 very important to me. I鈥檓 very intrigued with the notion of time as a concept and how I can manipulate time travel through the work,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e live in a society that is not very interested in history and so the only way to get people to even think about the past is to put something from the past in front of them. Here鈥檚 the photographic evidence. Here are the documents鈥 And we have to grapple with that. If we don鈥檛 look at the past, we can鈥檛 chart the future.鈥