Meta-Narratives: Same Story with New Eyes

A meta-narrative is a story about historical meaning or experience which offers a broader way to process history. For the Greenwood Art Project it is a way to tell the story of the 1921 Massacre of hurt with new eyes and a healing heart.

Our goal is to create narratives that sculpt possibility from stone-edged pain.

Black Wall Street was a post-slavery community in Tulsa, Oklahoma strategically planned with dignity and a black business on every corner. Greenwood was a hub for black innovation and entrepreneurship. A vibrant Mecca of commerce and community so rich that statesman and scientist Booker T. Washington named it, “Black Wall Street”. This community was burned down and lives were taken in 1921. Our series of meta-narratives works to give dignity back to the people of the Greenwood District.

The Honoring Prayer (2020) by Marlon Hall and Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

Re-Narrating Local Terrorism

Some criticize the meta or grand narrative for how it replaces local stories with a broad stroke. We turn what is wrong about this style of storytelling into what is right about re-narrating a tale of local terrorism into a spiritual pilgrimage toward the healing of a nation.

Thread

This meta-narrative visually tells the story of how black women are woven into the fabric of American life. The fabric of America would fall apart without them. On Black Wall Street, two Greenwood Art Project artists lay on an American flag with the words, “Black Lives Matter” beneath them.

From concrete conditions paved in fear, black women artists in Tulsa are rising from the ashes of the 1921 massacre with legacy, lineage, and new life. Brown flowers with amber souls are glowing from Black Wall Street’s nightmare known as racism to provide the possibility of a dream named America.

Face to Face (2020) by Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

Greenwood Art Project artists Erica Martez and Kenesha Daniels lay on the American flag that is on the BLM mural. They are transparently being the thread woven into the fabric of what makes the nation strong. These humans are black and they are women and they are artists. This short film hovers above the impact black women artists make in the world through local women in Tulsa. Shortly after the film was made the city decided to erase the mural.

Thread on Greenwood (2020-07-12) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

Disrupt the Comfortable and Comfort the Disrupted

Like the founders of the Black Lives Matter movement Alicia Garza, Patrice Cullers, and Opal Tometi the unclothed women in this meta-narrative embody a desire to disrupt the comfortable and comfort the disrupted in these times of change.

The vocals were provided by Michelle Thibeaux with music composed by Berniss Earl Travis II. Nina Simone's voice rings clear as a declaration of freedom to confront injustice. These women are nudely "being" who they are as a form of protest.

Thread (2020-07-22) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

The Black Lives Matter mural may have been erased, but the impact of this film and its message is indelibly marked. History may tell the story of the erasure of the mural but this meta-narrative tells the story of empowerment that can not be erased.

Thread Blur (2020-07-12) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

From nursing a nation to shaping its culture, they are more than civil citizens. Black women are sacred beings.

america the beautiful (2020-07-12) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

These women and women like them have paved the road that leads to our country's growth with legacy, lineage, and new life.

Thread Back and Forth (2020-07-12) by Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

They are the thread divinely woven into the fabric of American culture. 

Flowers from Dung Too (2020) by Marlon Hall and Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

The Honoring

This story was filmed on an old plantation in Coweta, Oklahoma outside of Tulsa. It is a way to honor the work our project is doing to engage art as a ritual that cultivates promise from the lingering pain of the 1921 Massacre and the history of racial violence in our nation.

In this fictitious story, a young man returns to ancestral grounds to offer flowers and welcome faith with a prayer of hope. This meta-narrative welcomes an ancestral presence. It liberates the power and story of artists in the Greenwood Art Project.

The Honoring (2020-07-23) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

Flowers Grown from Dung (2020) by Marlon Hall and Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

 There is an ancient-future to the way he prays to and appreciates his legacy. 

The Honoring Prayer (2020) by Marlon Hall and Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

Standing in the Need (2020) by Marlon Hall and Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

Rituals of remembering like the one this fictitious character engaged in can be a way to process the past to fertilize a flower and future black Tulsans may now hold.

Flowers Too (2020) by Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

This scene has a special power to it. L2 (the actor) was moved by the experience of making the meta-narrative. He was given very little direction. L2 felt his way through each scene listening for where to move from one moment to the next.

100 years ago in Greenwood 19-year-old Dick Rowland walked into an elevator car of the Drexel Building operated by a white 17-year-old Sarah Page. In between the first and top floor where Rowland hoped to use the restroom, Sarah screamed and Tulsa changed forever.

The screech unleashed a legion of demons possessed by racial hatred. A cloud of wicked witnesses heard what they needed to turn jealousy into misappropriated justice and perceived malice into murder. What may have been an accidental response to an elevator jolt became the worst of many incidents of racial terrorism in the land of the free and the home of the brave.

Home Building

Pastor Jamal Dyer (2020) by Brian EllisonThe Greenwood Art Project

Pastor Jamal Sings

This is an image of Pastor Jamal Dyer singing his arrangement of, "I'm building me a home" inside the old steel mill near Greenwood street.  He sang the old negro spiritual, "I'm Building me a Home" as worship to the heart of what is good and still living among the Greenwood residents. 

This was the location for our filming with Pastor Jamal Dyer and the subsequent audio recording of his beautiful voice as the soundtrack to the "I'm Building me a Home" meta-narrative.

Sight, Marlon F. Hall, 2020, From the collection of: The Greenwood Art Project
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Rusted Renewal, Marlon F. Hall, 2020, From the collection of: The Greenwood Art Project
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Where We Worked, Marlon F. Hall, 2020, From the collection of: The Greenwood Art Project
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Soon to be a BMX bike headquarters, this mill is where many African Americans worked historically in Greenwood. It was not only a place of business but a place of opportunity when systemic oppression limited opportunities for black folk in Tulsa. 

These entrepreneurs are bravely building something important to the legacy of Black Wall Street. They are building a timeless home for the heart of Black Wall Street.

Home Building (2020) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

Greenwood and Archer (2020) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

This intersection was the setting for the "I'm Building Me a Home" meta-narrative. Greenwood and Archer are not just the intersections of two streets. It is also the intersection of legacy and hope.

Greenwood Street (2020) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

People come from all over the world daily to learn about this community and the human possibility that lives here. 

Pops Eaton (2020) by Marlon F. HallThe Greenwood Art Project

This is an image of Bobby Eaton Senior, also known as "Pops Eaton", sharing a history lesson on Greenwood with some visitors that rapture their attention to every word he speaks.

Bobby Senior (2020) by Marlon HallThe Greenwood Art Project

"The slogan in Greenwood was, If Greenwood did not have it you did not need it" Mr. Eaton is the community griot and storyteller of Greenwood. A mayoral-like figure for the community who comes to Greenwood daily to patronize the businesses and share his wisdom.

The fireproof and impenetrable force of entrepreneurship still lives in 2021 despite the brutal massacre of 1921. Inspired by the ancestors and drawn into the future these present-day entrepreneurs fearlessly embody. The new group of entrepreneurs are the choreography of meaning and money. They dance in how they serve the Tulsa community with their goods and services.

Credits: Story

Directed by Marlon F. Hall
Director of Photography Brian Ellison
Music by Michelle Thibeaux,  Berniss Earl Travis II, and Denis Cisneros
Staring Erica Martez,  Kenesha Daniels, and L2

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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