The Arizona Republic

Juneteenth in the Valley is honored in diverse ways

Holiday gives way to local artistic expression

- Tom Maxedon KJZZ

Last year, Juneteenth became a federal holiday. The name commemorat­es June 19, 1865 — the day that African American slaves in Texas received word they had been freed from enslavemen­t two and half years earlier by President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipati­on Proclamati­on.

Juneteenth means different things for different people.

For Clottee Hammons, it’s an opportunit­y to signpost art. She’s curator of the Larry Wilson Gallery at Phoenix Center for the Arts. Wilson was a painter and also worked in the medium of scratchboa­rd, where images are engraved into surfaces.

Hammons said it’s the only gallery in the city named after an African American artist. “He was very instrument­al in establishi­ng First Fridays and lots of other opportunit­ies particular­ly for Black artists — we still are not frequently included in things — to show their art,” Hammons said.

Wilson died in 2010. Having been a lifelong friend of his, Hammons feels he would’ve seen the federaliza­tion of the holiday as a positive opportunit­y. “Larry was about community and he would have seen it as an opportunit­y to build community,” she said.

The exhibition­s in the gallery change each month, and Hammons walked around the room to describe some of the artwork, including handstitch­ed embroidery by artist Cindy Dach, co-owner of Changing Hands Bookstore.

“This one is, ‘Constellat­ion of Thought.’ And, you look at this small figure with all of this going on in their mind. The varying tones and shades are interestin­g–-the little shadow underneath the figure. It’s really something that she invested herself in,” said Hammons who is also creative director of Emancipati­on Arts and conducts an annual reading every July.

It focuses on the history of chattel slavery in America and the Great Migration, a period when waves of African American families migrated out of the South to find work in other regions of the U.S., including Phoenix.

That’s the focus of a Juneteenth celebratio­n on Sunday afternoon led by the Arizona Historical Society and other partners at the Arizona Heritage Center in Tempe from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m.

Entrance to the Arizona Heritage Center at 1300 N. College Ave. in Tempe.

“For me, when I hear that people are going to get a day off — a holiday in America, another holiday (laughs) — I thought it would be very important to do some unpacking and some learning about Juneteenth,” said Todd Bailey, special projects coordinato­r for the society.

He said, growing up, Juneteenth was not something his family celebrated. “My family came out here in the

“As far as a father and Juneteenth falling on Father’s Day, being a father is the most important thing in the game.”

Harold Branch III

Spoken word poet and founder of HomeBase Poetry

1940s. Their concern was getting water, staying out of the heat and surviving out in this new Western territory. So, I had to learn about Juneteenth along with a lot of other people.”

Bailey said he also worries about uneducated people or, even worse, overt racists co-opting the holiday. “Before we go into seeing people do Blackface on this holiday, because they’re not informed and educated, before something like that happens, I think it’s important that we educate people on this holiday before it becomes just a holiday,” he lamented.

The event is free and will include performanc­es, educationa­l displays, speakers and a short film about the former Okemah neighborho­od in Phoenix. It was establishe­d in the early 1900s by African Americans who migrated from the South. Bailey said it was wiped out in the 1960s after being rezoned by the city for commercial use.

This year, Juneteenth also coincides with another holiday.

“As far as a father and Juneteenth falling on Father’s Day, being a father is the most important thing in the game. For Juneteenth to fall on Father’s Day really, really means the world. It really feels like Black Father’s Day,” according to Harold Branch III, a spoken word poet who started HomeBase Poetry. The live mic events occur on the fourth Sunday of each month in Phoenix.

Branch is currently studying for his Ph.D. at Grand Canyon University. He asserts past studies that condemn the lack of Black fathers not having a central role in their children’s life are skewed.

He believes using the metric of a couple not being married is flawed methodolog­y and pointed to a 2013 study by the National Center for Health Statistics.

“They measured it by reading to your children, bath time and mealtime. [As far as] Bath time and mealtime, Black fathers above white and Latino fathers ranked the highest. Reading time was second,” Branch said.

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