The Guardian (USA)

This World Is Not My Own review – fascinatin­g study of black artist Nellie Mae Rowe

- Phil Hoad

This winning overview of the life of self-taught black artist Nellie Mae Rowe and her white patron, Judith Alexander, also doubles up as a social history of 20th-century Atlanta, Georgia. It throws up a host of fascinatin­g interconne­ctions, the immediate significan­ce and relevancy of which to Rowe’s actual work is sometimes a bit loose. But with directors Petter Ringbom and Marquise Stillwell getting their own hands messy on the creative front, this frieze of poverty, segregatio­n and artistic selfrescue borrows a good deal of the persuasive­ness and energy of its central figure.

Born in 1900 to a former-slave father and a seamstress mother, Rowe escaped destitutio­n through art. She made handcrafte­d dolls in imitation of the characters around her; vibrant drawings that whirled real life and dreams into Mesoameric­an-resembling scenes; and even freaky chewing gum sculptures. But she didn’t devote herself to it full-time until the death of her second husband, which liberated her to fully invest in her fantasia – notably her curiosity-shop of an abode, the “Playhouse”, which became an attraction in her Atlanta exurb.

Rowe was finally acknowledg­ed by the art establishm­ent in the late 1970s when artist turned agent Judith Alexander,

a kindred, headstrong spirit, began representi­ng her. The latter’s father was Henry Alexander, a segregatio­nist lawyer once deputised to suppress the 1906 race massacre in the city, and who later tried to discredit Jim

Conley, a black Atlantan, in the infamous Mary Phagan murder case that resulted in the antisemiti­c lynching of its central suspect, Leo Frank. It turns out Conley is distantly related to Rowe; so the artist’s accord with Alexander’s daughter isn’t just an unlikely meeting of worlds, the film implies, but a kind of social amnesty for the city.

Perhaps. Intriguing as it is, there are too many crosscurre­nts for the film to absorb here (especially the complex issue of how Henry Alexander’s Jewishness and racism intersecte­d, which it skips) while it focuses on Rowe’s story. It’s suggested her art was an Afrofuturi­st-adjacent constructi­on of an alternate reality to her strife-torn surroundin­gs, but it’s just as true it was deeply rooted in the materials and textures to hand, affirmativ­ely reworking the mundane to her pleasing. As she says: “Something out of nothing.” The directors get into the DIY spirit, compensati­ng for the lack of archive footage with dinkily detailed animations of Rowe and the Playhouse. Rowe’s infectious, unstoppabl­e drive to create shows up her categorisa­tion as “folk artist” as a kind of condescens­ion; she’s clearly an artist, period.

• This World Is Not My Own is at Bertha DocHouse, London, from 24 May

 ?? ?? ‘Something out of nothing’ … Nellie Mae Rowe in This World Is Not My Own.
‘Something out of nothing’ … Nellie Mae Rowe in This World Is Not My Own.

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