
Title: Irony
Size: 44 x 34
Media: Mixed Media
Year: 2007
Statement: These are newspaper clippings of all the crimes that Blacks were doing in Columbus, Ohio during the summer of 2007. Behind the clippings is Martin Luther King’s I have a Dream Speech. The bleeding bullet wounds represent the Dream that King had and what our society has done with it.
* * * * *
Lauren Luna is the Owner/Lead Artist at
Lauren Luna Ltd. Positive
Energy
Activates
Constant
Elevation

Michael and the Ginkgo Leaf (Graphite) by Tabitha Bianca Brown.
2010 Tabitha Bianca Brown. All Rights Reserved.
Tagged as:
Art

Solidad (22 x 30 – oil on canvas) by Lauren Luna
Lauren Luna is the Owner/Lead Artist of Lauren Luna Ltd.
© Lauren Luna 2010. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright Tabitha Bianca Brown 2010. All Rights Reserved.
“After the Dance” (Mixed media) by Tabitha Bianca Brown
The Pairabirds is the studio of illustrator Tabitha Bianca Brown. Her style is a hybrid of 70s soul, funk, noir, and minimalism. In 2005, Tabitha Brown received a BFA in Illustration from The American Academy of Art in Chicago, Illinois. She currently resides in Illinois. View more of her work at http://thepairabirds.com
Tagged as:
Art,
tabitha bianca brown
Copyright Lauren Luna 2010. All Rights Reserved.
“Demonstrator yells to the Photographer 1968” (Oil on Canvas – 36 x 42) by Lauren Luna
Lauren Luna is a sought after visual artist and designer. Born and raised in Columbus Ohio, Luna has been sharing her artistry with the world for over 10 years. Luna holds a BA in Fine Arts from Kent State University and a MA in Education from Manhattan College. She now resides in Columbus, Ohio with her son and is an actively producing artist. View more of her work at Artist Luna.
Tagged as:
Art,
lauren luna
Copyright Bethany Joy Collins. All Rights Reserved.
“2:1” By Bethany Joy Collins (Chalk and charcoal on blackboard)
Bethany Joy Collins was born in Montgomery, Alabama. Now she lives and works in Atlanta, Georgia. By combining, culling and rearranging historical and familial images, her work questions the inherent contradictions of racial identity in the South through erasable chalkboards, black paper drawings, and transparent vellum pieces. By attempting to represent this formation of racial identity, her work draws from interpretable childhood photographs, stories and memories-gathered, reinterpreted, and discarded in order to ground the individual self within the collective African-American narrative. Apparent opposites, distinct by definition yet not defined in opposition, remain central to her art. You can view more of her work at www.bethanyjoycollins.com
© 2010 Bethany Joy Collins. All rights reserved.
Tagged as:
Art,
bethany joy collins