ApexartAn exhibition of art by death row inmates has just opened in New York.
The show is called Life after Death and Elsewhere, and features work by Tennessee prisoners condemned to state execution for their crimes.
Apexart, a nonprofit gallery in Manhattan, is hosting the show, put together by Robin Paris and Tom Williams, both professors at Nashville’s Watkins College of Art, Design & Film, the show features over 30 works by a dozen condemned men, most of them murderers, Vice reports.
Derrick Quintero, If My Journey Were a Book Title. Credit: ApexartThe artist-inmates include Abu Ali Abdur’Rahman, G’dongalay Berry, Declicho ‘Ironhawk’ Besh, Gary Cone, Kennath Artez Henderson, Billy Irick, Akil Jahi, Donald Middlebrook, Derrick Quintero, and Dennis Suttles.
A collection of paintings are featured in the exhibition by Middlebrook.
Ron Cauthern, New Monument for Nashville. Credit: ApexartHe is imprisoned for murdering a 14-year-old boy, whom he beat, stabbed, raped with a stick, slashed across the chest in an X pattern, and urinated on before leaving him under a mattress in a dry river bed.
Harold Wayne Nichols, A World Without Prisons. Credit: ApexartMiddlebrook’s works recount a childhood of abuse, heroin addiction and prostitution. His paintings show his wish to express remorse to his victim’s family, and how that impulse is strangled by a capital punishment system urging silence, unless an inmate wishes to jeopardise their appeals case.
Akil Jahi, Proposal for a Monument. Credit: ApexartAbdur’Rahman used his Cherokee background and prison spirituality as inspiration to create a show of natural figures representing his escape into nature to flee childhood abuse he suffered.
Dennis Suttles, Flowers from Death Row II: The Tennessee Supreme Court. Credit: ApexartHis display also includes a descriptive poem and placard featuring audio narration by his spiritual advisor, smattered with inmates singing and making animal noises.
The memorial for Ironhawk. Credit: ApexartThe exhibition runs until October 24.