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Participants enjoy the drumming sounds of a Soro Bindi workshop. Courtesy of the Mattatuck Museum, 2021.

Mattatuck MuseumPartner Story

Inspired by one hundred years of African American and Black art making, the Mattatuck Museum expands art access to Waterbury’s African American and Black communities.

Conversation and Collaboration

In summer 2021, the Mattatuck Museum in Waterbury, Connecticut, displayed works by some of today’s most influential Black contemporary and modern artists. Kara Walker, Kehinde Wiley, Romare Bearden and Jordan Casteel were just some of the artists in the Mattatuck’s A Face Like Mine exhibition. Featuring over seventy artworks from the 1920s to today, the exhibition examined representations of African American and Black experiences through photographs, sculpture, textiles, paintings, and multi-media. Arranged thematically, A Face Like Mine used art to explore shifting ideas on identity, community, racial politics, and performance, honoring a century of African American and Black art and art making.

As a member of the MFA Boston Cohort in the Art Bridges Initiative, the museum borrowed works from several collections including Art Bridges’ Brenda P , 1974 by Barkley L. Hendricks. The breadth of works featured in A Face Like Mine speaks to the expansiveness of African American and Black experiences – experiences that informed the Mattatuck’s Learning & Engagement project supported by Art Bridges.

To be more responsive to African American and Black communities in Waterbury, the museum expanded pre-existing partnerships, while cultivating new ones with local partners such as the Black Business Alliance and the Center for Racial Dialogue and Communal Transformation, among several others. To advertise its programming, the Museum partnered with churches, placed ads on public transportation routes, mailed postcards, and used social media to expand awareness to African American and Black communities in Connecticut and the greater tri-state area. To create dynamic programming, the museum integrated dance, music, poetry, and the visual arts to bring their project to life.

The Mattatuck, in partnership with area artist Kennected, created a community mural, entitled Faces Like Ours, which featured images of memorable and influential figures in Waterbury. Over the course of eight weeks, the artist collaborated with people of all ages to bring together their unique talents and interests to create one image that celebrated their shared city history. Once completed, the mural was displayed in front of the Mattatuck Museum, building momentum for future collaborative public art projects.

Participants display their self-portraits as part of the Exploring the Self workshops. Courtesy of the Mattatuck Museum, 2021.

Image of Faces Like Ours collaborative mural created with artist Kennected and Mattatuck residents. Courtesy of the Mattatuck Museum, 2021.

Art and Performance

Art making focused upon personhood was at the center of another program, Exploring Self Identity art workshops. Using artmaking as a tool of self-discovery and expression, families created multi-media self-portraits with artist Alicia Cobb. The Mattatuck was thrilled to discover the positive response from intergenerational co-creation programs like this and has made plans to offer future work shops where all ages can create together. On the experience Cobb reflected:

“Yesterday, two of my virtual art students joined me during my self portrait workshop at the Mattatuck Museum. I have been working with these young ladies since the shut down in March of 2020. Today was our first time meeting in person! They are beautiful, talented & inspiring…All of our young artists did a phenomenal job during the entire workshop. From creative writing in our journals, sketching, painting and collages, they were able to create self portraits and learn a few new skills”

Music, in addition to the visual arts was central to the Mattatuck’s project. Hosted by Kevin “DJ KG” Grant and MC Mya Gray and featuring 10 singers, rappers, and poets, the Finding a Face Like Mine music showcase provided a unique space to bring together and spotlight local talent. In preparation for the program, the performers toured the exhibition to gain wide inspiration. By partnering with local creators, the program addressed city-specific issues, while including conversation that connected directly to many of A Face Like Mine‘s themes.

Continuing to embrace the multidisciplinary focus of their project, the museum hosted Soro- Bindi, an interactive Ghanian dance program for families. Acclaimed dancer, storyteller, and drummer, Iddi Saaka guided participants in a performance that incorporated traditional Ghanaian dances, songs, and stories. Families learned dances such as the Kpanlogo dance and the Bawa harvest and practiced playing Ghanaian percussion instruments. Partnering with the Waterbury Bridge to Success, the Mattatuck attracted new and returning visitors alike, surpassing their estimated for attendance.

Why We Love This Project

Highlighting the artwork of Black and African American artists and their visual explorations of Black and African American identity was essential in creating this A Face Like Mine project. We love that the Mattatuck very publicly and thoughtfully created a project that declared Black Lives Matter.

The exhibition and programming are extremely timely for our country as conversations about racial inequality are at the forefront and we’re enthusiastic the Mattatuck helped generate important and exciting conversations on Black histories, culture, and creativity and expanded access for communities that have been systemically and historically underrepresented in museums. This project was essential in building the Mattatuck Museum’s community engagement capacity and marks a major step in continuing to expand art access for all.