art

Celebrate the Neighborhood: Kamili by Amani Davis and Hannibal Hopson by Alex Young

Artists Amani Davis and Hannibal Hopson hail from Pittsburgh's Highland Park-Point Breeze-Squirrel Hill region and have seen the area go through changes over a 16-year period of growing up there. The pair notes how gentrification results in new housing developments, new businesses, and new families who are unaware or forget the history and culture already instilled in the neighborhood. Kamili, a sustainable art exhibition, counteracts the process. The following includes a conversation and visuals by Amani Davis, Hannibal Hopson, and Alex Young from June 11 and July 2, 2015 regarding Kamili.


Alex Young: What is the genesis of Kamili?

Amani Davis: I feel like in College motherf*ckers work too much... In Organic [chemistry] class you're looking at shapes of carbon--carbon makes little shapes: hexagons, triangles, all this little sh*t. I was looking at it and I knew it was an abstraction. I might have solved these problems, but even if they tell me I got an A I still don't know how this sh*t works. I was studying and I worked really hard all summer, studying, studying, studying like a little b*tch.  And then there was this little piece of wood and I was like Mom I'm gonna paint on that. I painted this stupid thing but to me it's like, "Oh I learned all this stuff and it's coming out in this stupid painting," and you just forget it. It's kind of a sad view of school, but I'm glad I know that sh*t obviously. I think I realized painting whether you are good or bad at it is definitely therapeutic.

Hannibal Hopson: I can definitely second that thought about painting being therapeutic, one, and two just the way that I had come about it.  What initially was kind of a thing I had done when I was really young I didn’t really know how to… I was trying too hard. I was looking at images in my head and I wanted to duplicate those images. I sat here for two days on the porch and I just started drawing on the inside of a desk. I started drawing on it and I painted it a bit and then all of my ideas started flooding in terms of what else I wanted to do with this time and space... I immediately started writing a ton more, I started reading more just so that more thoughts were going through my head, there was more inspiration, I was reading different types of things, I was reading different authors, and I was making music again. It was kind of a culmination and painting was the tale end of that culmination of real rejuvenation.

Amani: I was talking to a friend of mine today and he was like, "All you can do is hope that your art is tight because no one is going to tell you if it sucks or not." If it's garbage, it's garbage and you'll really never know. Your mom is going to be like, "Yeah it was tight." There was a moment for me looking at my shit being like 'its all garbage' to 'wow I kind of like one or two of these things.'

Alex: How do you feel about the lack of honesty, people not being honest about art?

Amani: That's the thing; most art right now is bad anyway. I don't want to say most art is bad, but I think a lot of artists rely on interpretations.

Hannibal: Art is so broad nowadays; it covers so many spectrums of our daily lives. I like to think that we each have our individual creativity and definitely a side you can tap into.  Artists recognize artists not really grasping the basic fundamental parts of art: being in tune with yourself, trying to figure out some of the things that you are thinking or dreaming and how to put that on paper.

Amani: A lot of it is about interpretation, how does one present themselves in reference to their art and make statements about their art... its way different than all that museum sh*t.

Hannibal: Unfortunately right now the hip hop industry is glorifying drugs and how drugs affect art and it's just kind of like is it really making you a better artist or did you always have that capability.

Amani: My favorite artist is addicted to lean.

Hannibal: We still bump Thugger (Young Thug) like whatever, we definitely respect his artistry.

Amani: I put my Mom on Thug. If the only way you can rap is by being high as fuck off lean then do it, but you don’t have to sell it to my little brother man, he’s little. 

Hannibal: I’m reading a Basquiat book about his drug use. It’s a biography, but obviously if you want to talk about Basquiat then you have to talk about New York in the ‘70s, ‘80s, club culture, new fashion, new disco, new law. This is a very changed world for artists in New York City and Manhattan. Basquiat was doing drugs in middle school and he never said anything about it, he never came out. People knew about it, he might have said one time I was high whatever, smoking on some grass whatever, but when it came down to it, it definitely ruined him in the end, you know he died of an overdose, but that’s something he did in his personal life.

Kamili is commemorative because it is authentic--it literally draws upon the material, which has long since been erased. The harsh reality of Pittsburgh's concrete jungle is change is ever-present, making gentrification and commercial re-development frequent across the city. Amani and Hannibal have seen their East Liberty, Pittsburgh neighborhood shift and commercialization remove the area's longstanding culture. As a result both artists deliver a tangible and organic exhibition to remember the community that raised them.

Alex: What is Kamili a commentary on?

Amani: To me if there's anything that I hope anyone goes to the show and f*cks with I feel like that wood was the art, that piece of garbage that someone threw out from someone's house and motherf*ckers were forcibly moving people out of homes through police, through money, or through gentrification-- all that bullsh*t-- that someone threw out a piece of someone's home that no one gave a f*ck about. I took time with it, I wanted to love the wood so motherf*ckers would be like, "Yeah people used to live here, people still live here, and I want to know where the people who lived there live now,"... the meaning is not on the art, the meaning is the wood.

Hannibal: The fact that you can't park on my street and my street will get permit parking in the next 5 years just because we have random people who are going to school at Chatham University just parking on our streets... that's something we can't really grasp, but we can grasp the people who have moved out of these homes.

Alex: How does sustainable art fit into this situation?

Hannibal: When you talk about sustainability and when you talk about art... there is a difference between what we are doing and street art. When you think about commissioned street art that is an element of sustainability when you can take a defaced property, when you can take a retaining wall and put someone who is artistically minded and go, "Here, please make this look a little better than it is," that's sustainable thinking. I speak to the clutter kind of piling up on each other so we gotta figure out ways, how can we limit, or how can we reduce, reuse, recycle-- the three 'Rs'-- how can we R and R and R our world.

Amani: I think with this there isn't that sense of pride with the residents of a neighborhood because that's just people. When those people leave, the space is still the same, but the space is very different now. I would not go to a block party in my neighborhood now, when I may have four years ago... I really hope that someone might say that this is street art, it is definitely about my street. My street is a different f*cking street now, but that sh*t in that room (referring to their art pieces), that's the street, that's the street that I seek to remember. Gentrification is crazy. There's no outlet to be like, "You know what, that's f*cked up. Where the f*ck do these people live now?" Obviously there's a positive way, an angry way, an ignorant ass way to do it, and a respectful way to do it, but I think that's something that motherf*ckers do not talk about. It's so linked to police brutality, incarceration, and all these problems. All these f*cking yups go home in their homes and are like, "Oh yeah that's so crazy that happened." It's like no, one you don't know and two, you're exacerbating this... I wasn't angry the whole time we were doing this I was having a ball.

Hannibal: No, there are definitely moments of anger. There are definitely moments where I have been angry in painting and there are definitely pieces that will be in the show where there's anger while I was painting and a lot of it had some very serious stuff to do with it. But the painting process itself wasn't necessarily an angry one, it was always a fulfilling one, it was always a relief.

Amani: This space is always going to be East Liberty… when neighborhoods flip socioeconomically in terms of the whole community, I feel like people want to forget sh*t.

Hannibal: That’s why they knock down schools.

Amani: Yeah, that’s why they knock down schools, change names, and shit. At least Hannibal and I are going to know other motherf*ckers lived here as well.

Hannibal: My Pittsburgh high school experience I can’t go back to either one of the high schools. One is being turned into apartments and the other one is already apartments and then knocked down. There is a whole class of Pittsburgh students who don’t know where we are going to have our reunions.

Alex: Would you say gentrification is rampant in Pittsburgh?

Hannibal: No, I would say the culture in Pittsburgh is one of inclusivity in terms of grasping to your neighborhood, grasping to family because Pittsburgh has that small town feel… I would say not gentrification, but definitely an attachment to your home, an attachment to your neighborhood, an attachment to the people around you, an attachment to childhood memories if you want to put it like that, but definitely space, we have that, neighborhood kids going to neighborhood schools—we have that. So if you knock down a school…?

Amani: Ya what the f*ck is that...

Hannibal: Obviously there are factors that you can't really weigh into or whatever, but that’s definitely something that has inspired our art and that is definitely something that we can speak to about our art… I don’t even want to make it a gentrification thing; I feel like even that is a cop out because there are factors that lead to gentrification. But, I will definitely say that the neighborhood aspect, especially in a city like Pittsburgh, is important. Being able to stay in your neighborhood and catch the bus, that’s why with the bus cuts everyone was hooting and hollering because people would have to walk outside of their comfort zone and there weren’t enough buses. Realistically how were they going to do that? And that’s when they decided they weren’t going to cut all the lines, but a small fraction. That stuff is important.

Amani: If your art sucks, not if your art sucks, but if people can’t find either meaning or just raw aestheticism then you probably missed the mark. I hope that if our message is received that people do realize that we are two black guys who did some cool sh*t about their neighborhood.

Hannibal: Real deal Holyfield these are pretty raw emotions… we are talking about organic experiences. You don’t have to go above and beyond your comfort zone to have organic feelings. The whole point of the art is that it’s always inside of you.

Go see Kamili for yourself in its last day at PointBreezeway today from 6-9pm.

PointBreezeway

7113 Reynolds St.

Pittsburgh, PA 15208






Kamili - Sustainable Art Exhibition by Amani Davis and Hannibal Hopson by Alex Young

"People from Pittsburgh love to talk about how they are from Pittsburgh," says any non-native who has interacted with the prideful bunch. Calling Pittsburgh home is acknowledging the city's importance; Pittsburghers point to steel production, Heinz Ketchup, popular figures, sport culture, its key position as Gateway to the West, and neighborhoods. This pride carries local artists Amani Davis and Hannibal Hopson in their sustainable art exhibition titled Kamili.

Both Amani and Hannibal hail from Pittsburgh's Highland Park-Point Breeze-Squirrel Hill region and have seen the area go through changes over a sixteen-year period of growing up there. The pair notes how gentrification results in new housing developments, new businesses, and new families who are unaware or forget the history and culture already instilled in the neighborhood. Kamili counteracts the process as Amani and Hannibal's exhibition celebrates past memories and attachment to their community. Using wood as their medium, the artists paint and draw on pieces people threw out on the street and scrap from demolition projects, repurposing their forgotten world. Amani voiced, "This is about my street," evoking a sense of empathy with his neighbors who have come and gone. Change is what inspires Kamili--Swahili for concrete, complete, or perfect. With city life change of landscape and people is constant, to which Amani appropriately states, "When neighborhoods flip people forget shit." Kamili pays homage to remembrance, while acknowledging nothing ever stays the same.

On June 11, 2015 InTheRough met with Amani Davis and Hannibal Hopson at their studio to talk about their upcoming exhibition. The conversation, and accompanying visuals, dealing with art, Pittsburgh society, hip hop, and their movement will be available here July 3. See Kamili for yourself July 2-3, 2015 at PointBreezeway, 6 to 9pm EST.

PointBreezeway

7113 Reynolds St.

Pittsburgh, PA 15208

 

Tell Your Story One Picture at a Time: @electricneel Talks Instagram by Alex Young

Marc Riboud, renowned French photographer once said, "Taking pictures is savoring life intensely, every hundredth of a second." What Instagram allows its users to do is instantly share those savored moments captured in photos and videos with the world. The social networking giant also offers an intimate documentary of people's daily lives: see what they had for dinner yesterday, how frequently they workout, the people they spend time with, and the places they have gone. An intriguing and reflective self-expression is the product of an Instagram feed from somebody like Neely Wood. The Chattanooga, TN native considers her whole life an adventure and wants people to know about it. Neely, better known as @electricneel, updates her IG religiously, posting stunning sceneries, portraits, and hobbies that narrate her journey. One scroll down her page and it is evident Neely is a storyteller, so InTheRough spoke with the photographer on how she utilizes the app to fulfill her creative expression. Enjoy the conversation below!


InTheRough: When did you download Instagram?

Neely Wood: I remember downloading Instagram the second I found out it was available on Android devices in April 2011. A pretty vivid memory for me actually... I was on a trip in Philadelphia and used whatever little 3G data I had left for the month to download the app!

ITR: How did you hear about it?

NW: It was all the rage when everyone started getting iPhones when I was in high school. I was behind on the 'Gram Train since I had an Android, but I was super stoked about having an app that I could edit my photos and post on without having to deal with Facebook statuses, "Become a Fan" pages, and ads.

ITR: Have you gone through periods of heavy use and periods of dormancy?

NW: I can definitely say I've never been through Instagram dormancy... I've always been a huge fan. But as Instagram etiquette has made its way into our understanding of how to use social media, I've been trying to keep my posts to one a day. It's so hard to do, though, when you're constantly taking photos like I am!

ITR: How does Instagram fit into your daily life?

NW: Like I've said, I post on Instagram about once a day. I'm a photographer, and I see just about everything as a photograph, so finding photos to take has never been a challenge for me. It's always been more of having to choose which photo to post that's harder! I like to go on "adventures" (as I call them) to new places in or out of town, either with friends or alone, and I'm always snapping photos when I do that. Not to mention, the classic latte art photo while you study at the coffee shop is always a great option!

ITR: What has VSCO offered for your photography?

NW: VSCO has really provided me with inspiration over the last year or so. For a while, I became super obsessive with having the exactly correct angles, point-of-view, quality, and lighting for my Instagram posts once I edited with VSCO, but recently I've tried to let go some. I really do love following VSCO-savvy accounts that do a lot with minimalistic and portraiture photography. That's definitely my style!

ITR: It's no secret you love facades, where have you been in the last few months that features great building-scapes?

NW: Ahhhh, architecture, my newest love! Recently I've been taking trips to bigger cities (I live in Greenville, South Carolina, which is relatively quaint) like Atlanta and Asheville. Atlanta's skyline is totally killer! And Asheville's elaborately muralled walls never get old. Any place that mixes older buildings with mod city life is right down my alley (no pun intended).

ITR: Do you find yourself using a DSLR camera or your mobile camera more often?

NW: When I travel, I'm definitely more into using my DSLR simply because I'm guaranteed that crisp quality that you have to work harder for with a mobile camera (I have a Galaxy s4). But, I do send all of my DSLR (Nikon d5000, in my case) photos to my email to be edited by VSCO on my phone if I intend on posting them. I wouldn't choose any other method... unless, of course, the simple VSCO app was accessible on the computer!

ITR: How has your Instagram evolved?

NW: When I first started 'gramming, I posted literally anything and everything... no joke. If I drank coffee in the same mug every day, I would post it every time. I was so ridiculous! But also, there was no such thing as post-limiting back in 2010! Now, I'm much more selective. If I do nothing cool on a particular day, I like to post older photos I took that week. It's a lot less poor-quality selfies and a lot more landscapes and portraits.

ITR: Describe your Instagram's content in your own words.

NW: My bio provides a pretty sound description of my account (and it rhymes!): "mainly just adventures, friends, coffee, the gym, ukulele, and @[my boyfriend's handle]". I post what I do... I hike, travel, spend lots of time at coffee shops, post loads of cheesy couple pictures, and share both my gym progress and when I learn a new song on my ukulele. It's mostly about photography, though.

ITR: You obviously value fitness, tell us how you keep active.

NW: Being a full-time college student that keeps academics number one, I've made it my mission this past semester to make the gym a regular part of my week. After the winter holidays, I started making a habit of going 5 times per week to the gym, even if it was for less than an hour. Being let's face it -- you're gonna waste the hour watching endless YouTube videos after class anyway. I also used Instagram to motivate myself because there are so many fitness accounts to follow, and I was sure to keep my followers updated on my progress. It's a great motivator to bring your booty to the weight room.

ITR: How is the ukulele coming?

NW: I started playing last year during my winter break of 2014. I've always wanted to pick up another instrument that you could sing and play with, and the guitar seemed way too big for me to tackle. My friend had a spare ukulele, and I haven't stopped since! Instagram video definitely gave me an outlet for it.

ITR: Is your feed cohesive or is there a collage effect?

NW: I wish I had some more cohesiveness, actually. My feed is totally random. But, I do notice when I've only been posting pictures of people or myself... then I'll just take a trip downtown and find something new!

ITR: Do you have the perfect caption?

NW: Definitely some sort of pun. I'm really bad at captions... I get so excited to post the photo most of the time that my caption comes out super straight-forward. And then I usually change it later (shhhhh)!

ITR: What posts stick out and why?

NW: Posts that aren't square-cropped! It's so rare that I'll post something with a border to make it fit in the Instagram square because it totally interrupts the flow. Switching back and forth between squares and rectangles is a huge pet peeve of mine, I'll admit.

ITR: Best coffee spot you've 'grammed?

NW: That is really, really difficult to answer. I loved this shop that has a few locations in Atlanta called Octane Coffee Bar. It's simple design gave me so much inspiration. Plus, the latte art was on another level!

ITR: Your posts definitely feature PDA, why is that?

NW: My Instagram is a very accurate reflection of what's important to me in my day-to-day life. Recently, most of my adventures have been with my boyfriend since we live a few hours apart. Photos are moments turned into memories, so I find myself taking a lot of photos of us when we are together, and I can never resist posting a cheese/cute/romantic picture. To me, displays of affection are art! If I see a couple walking down the street or sitting in the park far enough away not to notice me, I always snap a photo of them.

ITR: Did you have a favorite adventure this year?

NW: I'd have to say that Asheville is always my favorite. I've been four or five times this semester for various occasions, and I never get tired of the art that seeps from its streets. I went in April this one time for a "meditation and mindfulness" seminar at the UNC Asheville, and I just remember it being so alive at night. I didn't get many pictures that time, but it was a really neat perspective.

ITR: What do you wish to convey through your Instagram?

NW: I really just wish to display who I am! I try not to do a whole lot with glitz and glam and selfies, but to instead to more of the whole here-is-my-world-why-don't-you-take-a-look thing. It's not about likes or follows at the end of the day... It's about inspiration, artistry, and the ability to instantaneously share what you're doing with the world.

Follow Neely's movement on Instagram here.