Photoville

Jun 192023
 archive : 2023

Clayton Sisterhood Project Exhibition Walkthrough with Laila Annmarie Stevens in conversation with Elias Williams as part of Juneteenth in Queens

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Laila Annmarie Stevens

Laila Annmarie Stevens

Artist walkthrough of the Clayton Sisterhood Project exhibition in Roy Wilkins Park led by Laila Annmarie Stevens as part of Juneteenth in Queens

Presenters: Laila Annmarie Stevens

Moderators: Elias Williams

Location: Roy Wilkins Park

Number 82 on the official photoville map

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Presented by:

  • Queens Museum
  • Juneteenth in Queens

Please join us for a walkthrough of the Clayton Sisterhood Project exhibition in Roy Wilkins Park led by artist Laila Annmarie Stevens in conversation with Elias Williams as part of Juneteenth in Queens–a community empowered event to highlight, celebrate, and commemorate the history of Black Ancestors and their journeying to liberation through Juneteenth. Working in portraiture and documenting their intimate surroundings and communities, both Stevens and Williams have featured their photography work in Roy Wilkins Park and will open a conversation about their experiences with the medium.

Part of the 2023 Photoville Festival, the Clayton Sisterhood Project explores the continuing legacy built by Laila Annmarie Stevens’s sisters and nieces, originally from South Jamaica, Queens, New York who moved to Clayton, North Carolina together. Inspired by the historical branches of trees on southern terrain and longing for ancestral remembrance through the traditional family album, Stevens utilizes the 1960s Black Power Movement principle of Self-Determination to preserve and document intergenerational Black Women across both states.

Presenter Bios

  • Laila Annmarie Stevens

    Laila Annmarie Stevens

    Laila Annmarie Stevens (b. 2001) is a Black Queer Photographer and Visual Artist from Queens, NY. She received her BFA in Photography and Related Media at The Fashion Institute of Technology. Their portraiture is informed by their passion for honoring marginalized youth voices and embracing the fullness of Black life through the creation of a digital safe space. Their work could be described as a raw and intimate perspective. Through her early work in youth organizations, she’s incorporated image-making to envision a world of inclusion and power.

    Photo by Olivia Rae Harris

Moderator Bios

  • Elias Williams

    Elias Williams

    Elias Williams is a photographer born, raised and working in New York City. Through long-term portrait-based projects he celebrates historically underrepresented communities referencing lived experiences through the nuances of music, pride, race and resilience. His photographs have been showcased at the Photoville Festival, International Photo Festival Leiden, the Morris Museum, and The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art and the Museum of the City of New York. His clients include Apple, Bloomberg Markets, Essence, HuffPost, Instagram, National Geographic, The New York Times, The New Yorker, TIME and The Wall Street Journal among others. Williams is also a recipient of the Bronx Council on the Arts’s Bronx Recognizes Its Own (BRIO) award (2017), Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellowship (2017), World Press Photo Joop Swart Masterclass participant (2020) and Center of Photography at Woodstock Artist-in-Residence (2022).

Organizations

  • Queens Museum

    Queens Museum

    The Queens Museum is dedicated to presenting high quality arts and educational programming for the people of New York, and particularly the residents of Queens, a uniquely diverse ethnic, cultural, and international community. The Museum’s work honors the history of our site and the diversity of our communities through a wide ranging and integrated program of exhibitions, educational initiatives, and public events.

  • Juneteenth in Queens

    Juneteenth in Queens

    Juneteenth in Queens is a community empowered event with Black Creativity, Black Business, Black Love, Black Wealth, Black Networking, Black Opportunity, Black Excellence, and Black Joy. Since the summer of 2020, multiple Queens communities have reconnected to highlight, celebrate, and commemorate the history of Black Ancestors and their journeying to liberation through Juneteenth. In June 2020, inspired to make a difference, Check on Your Black Friends Inc. and stakeholders rallied the state of NY to introduce a bill to codify the liberation journey for the Black diaspora. The bill was introduced by New York State Senator Kevin Parker and Assemblywoman Alicia Hyndman and was signed into law in October 2020. It paved the way for President Joe Biden to emulate the efforts, making Juneteenth a national recognized holiday on June 19th, 2021.

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