Virtual Artist Talk and Performance – The AfroDixieRemixes: A VMFA Listening Session

This program is inspired by VMFA’s special exhibition The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse, and the music featured in the program can be heard in the Confederate Memorial Chapel in VMFA’s E. Claiborne and Lora Robins Sculpture Garden. The Chapel is open daily from 10am–4pm.

John Sims’s audio-visual-poetic presentation subversively confronts the song “Dixie” (the anthem of the Confederacy). He remixes, remaps, and cross-appropriates a collection of 14 tracks of the song performed in the style of the following Black-music genres: spiritual, blues, gospel, jazz, funk calypso, samba, soul, rhythm & blues, house, and hip-hop. The recordings feature musicians from Sarasota, Florida, and surrounding areas. To critically engage this project with both historical and current social-political-cultural themes, the artist invited poets, artists, scholars, activists, and community members to respond to the music.


John Sims, multimedia artist and producer

About the Artist

John Sims, a Detroit native, is a Sarasota-based conceptual/multimedia artist, writer, and activist who creates art and curatorial projects spanning the areas of installation, performance, text, music, film, and large-scale activism, informed by mathematics, design, the politics of white supremacy, sacred symbols/anniversaries, and poetic/political text. For 20 years he has been working on the forefront of contemporary mathematical art and leading the national pushback on Confederate iconography. Currently, he is Artist in Residency at the Ringling Museum, where he developed the performance piece 2020: (Di)Visions of America.

He is also completing his two-decade national art-activism project, Recoloration Proclamation, which explores, re-examines, and remixes Confederate iconography as it relates to the African American experience. The project features recolored Confederate flags; a hanging installation in Gettysburg; a 13 southern states Confederate flag funeral; videos; site-specific performances; a play; a collection of experimental films; the music project, “AfroDixieRemixes,” the annual “Burn and Bury Confederate Flag Memorial”; and the outside performance and Kennedy Museum exhibition of “The Proper Way to Hang to a Confederate Flag” at Ohio University. Over the years, this work has incorporated more than 150 collaborators including poets, musicians, and artists throughout the country.

His work has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, CNN, NBC News, USA Today, NPR, The Guardian, ThinkProgress, Al Jazeera, Art in America, Sculpture, Science News, Nature, and Scientific American. He has written for CNN, Al Jazeera, The Huffington Post, Tampa Bay Times, Detroit Metro Times, Guernica Magazine, The Rumpus, and TheGrio.

Listening Session Respondents

Stephanie Arduini is the Deputy Director, and Director, Edward L. Ayers Center for Civil War & Emancipation Studies at the American Civil War Museum.

Clifford Chambliss III is an Artist and Community Activist.

Dr. Betty Neal Crutcher is an Educator and Consultant.

Dr. Ron Crutcher is a Professor of Music and the President of the University of Richmond.

Chlo’e Edwards is a community advocate and activist, President of Black Lives Matter 804 and Policy Analyst at Voices for Virginia’s Children.

Danita Rountree-Green, M.A., is a wordsmith, trauma healer and co- CEO of Coming To The Table-RVA.

Ava Holloway is a performer and Co-Founder of Brown Ballerinas for Change.

Dr. Luisa Igloria, Poet Laureate of the Commonwealth of Virginia (2020-2022), Louis I. Jaffe Endowed Professor & University Professor of English and Creative Writing at Old Dominion University.

Dr. Madison Moore is an Artist-Scholar, DJ, and Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University.

Dr. Hermine Pinson is a Poet and the Frances L. and Edwin L. Cummings Professor of English & Africana Studies at William & Mary.

Douglas Powell (Roscoe Burnems) is a Spoken-word Artist, Educator and Richmond, VA’s First Poet Laureate.

Dr. Lance Watson is the Senior Pastor at Saint Paul’s Baptist Church in Richmond, VA.


Presented by

Community Conversation: The Natural Bridge and the Monacan Indian Nation

Watch on YouTube

The Natural Bridge is one of the most frequently depicted sites in 19th-century American landscape art, but this body of work largely obscures the historic and contemporary presence of indigenous Virginians. Monacan tribe member Victoria Ferguson and her husband, Dean Ferguson, worked at the Natural Bridge site for over two decades, presenting knowledge about the cultural aspects and biodiversity of the Natural Bridge. The Fergusons will consider the complex legacy of the Natural Bridge with VMFA curators Dr. Christopher Oliver and Dr. Johanna Minich.

This event will be recorded and posted to the VMFA YouTube channel at a later date.

3 in 30: American Land, American People

Join Dr. Johanna Minich, Assistant Curator for Native American Art for the VMFA, to explore three works of art in the permanent collection of Native American Art.

3 in 30: American Land, American People – In Person
Tue, Nov 2, 2021, 11—11:30 am | Meet at Visitor Services
Free, no reservations required.


3 in 30: American Land, American People- Virtual
Thu, Nov 4, 2021, 11—11:30 am | Virtual Program
Free. Registration via Zoom required.


View all previous virtual programs on YouTube.

Brewer’s Sessions x VMFA The Dirty South

This special Juneteenth edition of Brewer’s Sessions is presented by VPM at VMFA. Inspired by the exhibition The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse, this set by Bee Boisseau Project celebrates Black music—from jazz and blues to R&B and funk. At VMFA through September 6, the exhibition traces 100 years of African American cultural influence and artistic expression, exploring the visual and musical artistry that has shaped the South and the nation for generations. Tune in June 19 at 7 PM for this special edition of Brewer’s Sessions on live from VPM’s Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/myVPM.

Virtual Curator’s Talk – The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse

Watch on YouTube

Valerie Cassel Oliver, the exhibition’s curator and VMFA’s Sydney and Frances Lewis Family Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, discusses the works on view in the groundbreaking exhibition The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse, and how they reveal aesthetic traditions of the African American South and their influences on art, music, and other forms of cultural expression over the last 100 years.


Vallerie Cassel Oliver, VMFA’s Sydney and Frances Lewis Family Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art

Artist Talk: Raven Custalow

Watch on YouTube

In 2020, Raven Custalow, Virginia Native artist of Mattaponi and Rappahannock ancestry and an enrolled member of the Mattaponi tribe, was commissioned by VMFA to create a feather-mantle titled Puttawus. Join the museum for a discussion about the work and the artist’s practice with Dr. Johanna Minich, VMFA’s Assistant Curator of Native American Art.

Member Appreciation Nights: The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse

Beginning May 26, Enjoy a series of special evenings that provide VMFA members the opportunity to view The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse on a night of members-only access to the exhibition. Single-cardholder members may reserve one free guest ticket each week, and dual-cardholder members may reserve two free guest tickets to the exhibition.

The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse, organized by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, investigates the aesthetic impulses of early 20th-century Black culture that have proved ubiquitous to the southern region of the United States. The exhibition chronicles the pervasive sonic and visual parallels that have served to shape the contemporary landscape, and looks deeply into the frameworks of landscape, religion, and the Black body—deep meditative repositories of thought and expression.


Generously Sponsored by

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VMFA Youth & Family Studio Programs: Faculty & Staff Art Show 2021

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VMFA’s Youth and Family Studio Programs employs a team of more than 30 professional artists and educators to lead classes for students from the ages of five to seventeen. These studio instructors have varying academic and artistic backgrounds and specialize in a wide range of media, bringing diversity and expertise to our exciting programs.

VMFA is pleased to feature this selection of work created by the talented educators who are essential to making our programs such a success—particularly this past year. We are thankful for their commitment, passion for art, and ability to adapt in ways we never thought possible.

To learn more about VMFA’s Youth, Teen, and Family Studio programs, visit VMFA.museum/youth-studio/.

Participating Faculty and Staff
Alex Parrish | Anh Do | Caroline Velazquez | Celeste Johnston | Dan Kaczka | Heidi Field-Alvarez | Kendra Dawn Wadsworth | Lindsay Olsen Steele | Mary Swezey | Mayzie Zechini | Megan Liles Endy | Morgan Swank | Rachel Deutch | Sandi Wiley | Stephanie O’Dell Daugherity | Steven Glass | Tiffany Ferreira | Todd Raviotta

Collection Connection: American Land, American People

Explore how pairing historical and contemporary artworks by Native American and Euro-American artists inspires new readings and unearths overlooked narratives of our nation’s history and culture. Following a discussion on the current gallery exhibition, American Land, American People, Haley Clouser, Exhibitions Research Assistant, will present additional examples of collection pairings in an attempt to offer a more inclusive, more complete history of the United States.

Pi Day Online Movie Conversation

Join Dr. Peter Schertz, Jack and Mary Ann Frable Curator of Ancient Art, VMFA, and Vida Williams, Data Scientist, Singlestone & Program Chair, CodeVA, for a Pi Day conversation about the celebrated 2009 movie Agora starring Rachel Weisz as Hypatia–one of the earliest female mathematicians, astronomers, and philosophers.

Within a week prior to Pi Day, view Agora on one of these three streaming services: Amazon Prime, Google Play, or Pluto (free with ads).

Agora (2009; 127 min; dir. Alejandro Amenábar)
Rated R for violence.
In Alexandria, Egypt, AD 391, Hypatia is caught up in society’s upheavals: religious conflict and threats to institutions of higher learning. Hypatia’s student Orestes is in love with her as is her personal servant. Hypatia’s only interests are the movement of the sun and planets and the brotherhood of all.
(Image credit: Park Circus Group)