The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

African American art climbs mountain

Georgia artist explores cultural intersecti­ons in Affrilachi­a project.

- By Candice Dyer

Artist Marie Cochran never picked cotton, but her parents did.

They were sharecropp­ers who eventually went to work at the Coats and Clark textile mill in Toccoa. Marie, the oldest of two, was the dreamer in the family. She didn’t talk much, but she always doodled in the margins and sketched portraits of her parents’ friends.

Integratio­n was slow to hit northeast Georgia. In 1966, she was among the first Black children to attend kindergart­en in Stephens County, which is named for the vice president of

the Confederac­y.

“I came along at an interestin­g time,” says Cochran, raising an eyebrow.

She received many of the predictabl­e mixed signals as a young racial pioneer in the mountains, and she looked around her largely white community for Black role models.

Early on, she had the inklings of a possible identity crisis. “I had a crush on John Boy from ‘The Waltons,’” she says, “but I also had a crush on Michael from ‘Good Times.’ I loved ‘Soul Train,’ but I also really enjoyed ‘Hee Haw.’”

She shrugs and, to prove her point, launches into a twangy version of “Gloom, Despair, and Agony on Me.”

Moreover, her exploratio­ns of Currahee Mountain — my “touchstone” — and Tallulah

Gorge felt a world away from her friends in Atlanta who “thought we were the only Black people up here.” She knew that wasn’t true. “But I didn’t see anybody on television or in the movies who looked and felt like a Black version of me,” she says. “I knew I was from a special place.”

It wasn’t until she attended college and heard the word “Affrilachi­a” that “suddenly, everything clicked,” she says. “I knew exactly what that meant, and I knew there were more people out there like me. People associate Blackness with Atlanta, Detroit, D.C., but we have it here in the mountains. We may be small in number, but we’re large in impact.”

A portmantea­u of African and Appalachia, Affrilachi­a was coined by Kentucky poet Frank X Walker 30 years ago.

“I created the word back in 1991 after reading a dictionary definition that defined Appalachia­ns as white residents of the mountains of Appalachia,” he says. “The official Appalachia­n Regional Commission map of official counties in Appalachia has always included Birmingham and Pittsburgh, which made that definition problemati­c. I wrestled with that problem on the page and came up with Affrilachi­a.”

Cochran was honing her skills as a multi-media artist when she latched onto the catchword, and it soon became her calling. From her base in Toccoa, she establishe­d the Affrilachi­an Artist Project a decade ago.

The project is a coalition of 3,000 creative types who are Black and Appalachia­n that Cochran promotes with exhibition­s, lectures and a directory. And their numbers are expanding.

“I’m a cross-pollinator,” she says. Cochran, now 59, helps artists in different phases of developmen­t with an eye toward preserving the work of elders who might be otherwise overlooked. For these reasons, she has become known as the “Appalachia­n Zora Neale Hurston.”

For example, she recruited Charlotte Ka, a painter and mosaic maker for a show she curated at the prestigiou­s August Wilson African American Cultural Center in Pittsburgh and also took her for a round of artist talks in Kentucky.

“Marie opened up opportunit­ies

for me and helped my career, as she does for countless other people,” says Ka, 79. “And makes it look so cool and effortless — you never see her sweat.”

Cochran seemed destined for this path. She has always created, and she has always connected. One of only a handful of African-American art students at the University of Georgia when she attended and taught there, she created a club for them called the US Collective, which exists to this day.

“She showed us how to find a path by leading by example, because there were so few of us,” says her former student Rodrecus Davis, now department head of Visual and Performing Arts at Grambling University. “She opened up how we thought about ourselves while she was setting a standard of fostering excellence.”

A multi-media artist who draws, paints, sculpts and creates collages, Cochran is drawn to ambitious installati­ons. Her professor, Judith McWillie, recalls a piece that exemplifie­d the artist’s style. “She configured these ritualisti­c and ‘found’ objects that evoked the imagery from the Black church that was mindful of the struggle. It compressed at least 30 years of African American history into one display. Everything Marie does is layered, ambitious and evocative like that.”

Cochran holds a BFA from the Lamar Dodd School of Art at UGA and an MFA from the Art Institute of Chicago, and she has shown work at the Studio Museum in Harlem, Spelman College Museum of Fine Art and the High Museum of Art.

But her focus these days is on the Affrilachi­an Artist Project, which encompasse­s all forms of expression including music and literature and has contribute­d to something Cochran likens to a “Harlem Renaissanc­e” in the hills.

Dom Flemons of the Carolina Chocolate Drops, a Black old-time string band that won a Grammy for the 2010 album “Genuine Negro Jig,” sums up the nesting-doll approach of Cochran’s Affrilachi­an Art Project: “Marie is trying to bring awareness and understand­ing to a marginaliz­ed group within a marginaliz­ed group, to talk about how they intersect and enrich each other.”

It’s a tricky endeavor. “Appalachia is stereotype­d,” says Cochran. “Black people are stereotype­d. I want to dispel stereotype­s of both. I vow to honor the messy, bitterswee­t contrast of my home region’s historic challenges.”

Currently, Cochran is collaborat­ing with photojourn­alist Chris Aluka Berry on “Affrilachi­a: The Remnant That Remains,” a collection of photograph­s of Black people in the region. One of his treasures is a shot of an annual Black camp meeting in White County that dates back to 1886.

“Outsiders think Appalachia is just ignorant white people,” Berry says of the stereotype­s that plague the region. “But I’ve met some of the smartest people in my life there, white and black. Throughout their history these people have had to lean on each other, so I think race relations are actually a little better here than in Atlanta.”

Their project celebrates that neighborli­ness, but because the Black experience inevitably entails a history of pain in this country, the Affrilachi­an Art Project also has tackled subjects such as environmen­tal racism and institutio­nal discrimina­tion in education. The city of Asheville, N.C., last year commission­ed a mural of the words “Black Lives Matter” to be painted on a street encircling a plaza that contains the statue of a Confederat­e governor with a Klan history. Cochran was in charge of the “M.” Her group received a death threat but finished the job.

A professor of documentar­y studies at Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Cochran is the subject an exhibition at Piedmont College in Demorest through March 25. “Marie T. Cochran: Notes of an Affrilachi­an Daughter in the Time of Covid” features a different installati­on every week incorporat­ing photograph­s, sculptures and drawings. The two constants will be a short film explaining the concept of the Affrilachi­an Art Project and a panoramic photograph of the north Georgia mountains covering one wall.

“The mountains are my home,” says Cochran. “I claim them.”

 ?? COURTESY OF MARIE COCHRAN ?? Marie Cochran created the “M” in a Black Lives Matters mural on an Asheville, N.C., street.
COURTESY OF MARIE COCHRAN Marie Cochran created the “M” in a Black Lives Matters mural on an Asheville, N.C., street.
 ?? CHRIS ALUKA BERRY/@ALUKASTORI­ES ?? Deacon B.C. Mance, 103, is photograph­ed in his home in March 2017 in Stephens County, Georgia, in part of a series focusing on people in the region, “Affrilachi­a: The Remnant That Remains,” by photojourn­alist Chris Aluka Berry.
CHRIS ALUKA BERRY/@ALUKASTORI­ES Deacon B.C. Mance, 103, is photograph­ed in his home in March 2017 in Stephens County, Georgia, in part of a series focusing on people in the region, “Affrilachi­a: The Remnant That Remains,” by photojourn­alist Chris Aluka Berry.
 ?? COURTESY OF ASHEVILLE ART MUSEUM ?? Marie Cochran, founder of the Affrilachi­an Artist Project, stands by her piece, “Testify,” in Asheville, N.C.
COURTESY OF ASHEVILLE ART MUSEUM Marie Cochran, founder of the Affrilachi­an Artist Project, stands by her piece, “Testify,” in Asheville, N.C.

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