Snapshot of civil rights movement sparked by George Floyd's death now on display in Brooklyn

Crystal Cranmore Image
Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Artist displays snapshot of George Floyd-inspired civil rights movement
Crystal Cranmore reports on artist Chris Cook's snapshot of the civil rights movement in NYC.

BEDFORD-STUYVESANT, Brooklyn (WABC) -- In Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, there is a snapshot of the civil rights movement that spread throughout New York City and beyond last summer in the days following the death of George Floyd.

"Even in this day and age we are still fighting as a people," said artist Chris Cook. "The message is clear, police brutality is going on."

Fifteen images from Cook's Black Lives Matter series are now part of the "Am I Next?" collection at the Welancora Gallery. It's Cook's very first solo show.

"It's a lot of emotions that I felt, so I tried to pour that into some of the imagery," he said.

There is a combination of limited edition action shots and portraits like one of a woman wearing the word "enough" on a shirt, an American flag as a face covering with the names of Black victims of police brutality.

"What does it mean to you to have been so close, on the frontlines?" Eyewitness News reporter Crystal Cranmore asked.

"I just think it was a huge opportunity," Cook said. "It's a full circle. Because I am showcasing work in the community I grew up in."

"Sometimes it's difficult for young artists and curators to find a professional outlet to express themselves," said Ivy Jones, the founder of Welancora Gallery.

Jones' gallery represents and promotes artists of color. She selected Cook's photos.

"I was particularly drawn to the images with signs," Jones said.

She spoke about what led her to name the exhibit, "Am I Next?"

"'Am I Next?' It's really the question Black people have been asking probably since the middle passage, to me it says we have a long way to go," Jones said.

Cook's work will be at the gallery through April 10.

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RESOURCES

We are also publishing resources in a range of areas, which will grow and can be found below:

Ways to Help

Black Lives Matter

Black Voters Matter Fund

NAACP

National Institute for Criminal Justice Reform

Voices of Community Activists & Leaders (VOCAL-NY)

Black LGBTQIA + Migrants Project

Teaching the Next Generation

Black Lives Matter at School

Creating Space To Talk About Racism At Your School

Teaching for Black Lives - Rethinking Schools

Black-Owned Bookstores in New York and New Jersey

Cafe con Libros (Brooklyn)

Grandma's Place (Harlem)

Sister's Uptown (Manhattan)

Source of Knowledge (Newark)

The Lit. Bar (Bronx)

The Little Boho Bookshop (Bayonne)

Books

Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou

Raising White Kids: Bringing Up Children In A Racially Unjust America by Jennifer Harvey

So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander

White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism

Podcasts

1619

Black Wall Street 1921

Jemele Hill is Unbothered

Still Processing:

Movies

American Son: Available on Netflix

If Beale Street Could Talk: Available on Hulu

Just Mercy: Available on Amazon Prime

Selma: Available on Amazon Prime

The Hate U Give: Available on Amazon Prime

When They See Us: Available on Netflix

Documentaries

13th: Available on Netflix

America Inside Out with Katie Couric: Available on National Geographic

Becoming: Available on Netflix

I am Not Your Negro: Available on YouTube