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Janey Fritsche

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    • It's All a Dream We Dreamed
    • Flora, Fauna, and Peeps
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    • Becoming Sand
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Currently exhibited at Marin Museum of Contemporary Art in Novato, California as well as online with the Triton Museum of Art in Santa Clara, California.

Currently exhibited at Marin Museum of Contemporary Art in Novato, California as well as online with the Triton Museum of Art in Santa Clara, California.

Black Lives Matter

June 7, 2020

I am hoping that my paintings and writings are not offensive to the Black community. It is hard to know what is okay to do in order to help. Should I just be listening and learning and not be active for now? Pema Chodron’s words, “Fail, Fail Again, Fail Better” emboldened me to do what feels instinctively right … even if it doesn’t seem to work out, at least initially. This is my first blog posting, so it is another learning experience.

Painting the portraits of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor came from a place of sadness, love, deep compassion and empathy.  The stark cruelty of the video of George Floyd’s death was emotionally inescapable for me … and the world.  I kept thinking of his mother and how horrible it must be for her.  Even though I haven’t painted a portrait for many years, I knew I had to give it a try; an outlet was needed for all these emotions.

It was about 90 degrees in my studio the day I painted George Floyd’s picture.  It felt so intimate looking closely at his photograph and responding with paint.  There were some tears balanced with some great soul music to sing along to … sometimes loudly, while I worked. The process felt fast and free and scary, unfamiliar and familiar; all tangled up with feelings of love and grief.  Sometimes I would silently talk to him while I painted and tell him how sorry I was for what happened.

A couple of days later, I painted a portrait of Breonna Taylor, another heart-breaking death that is too painful to believe.  She was an emergency medical technician at home asleep after midnight when police officers with a “no-knock” search warrant (for suspected drug deal) ended up shooting her eight times.  No drugs were found on the premises.  It was all a terrible screw-up.

The more I looked at her photograph, the more I appreciated her beauty.  The selfie looks like it was taken from the passenger side of the front seat, and her hair / makeup / skin / everything was perfection.  Maybe she was going to a party; she looks peaceful and pretty and confident. I wanted to let her bright energy shine through. It felt like a bond of tenderness with her.

These tragedies seem just impossible to believe.  But we all know similar, unnecessary violence against Blacks happens all too frequently … on so many levels.  Systemic racism is entrenched and resistant.  This must be the turning point. It’s time we stand together.

Join the global movement and contribute: BlackLivesMatter.com ACLU.org

Anti-racism resources of organizations, films, books, podcasts, social media, etc

(For those who have asked, both paintings are oil on cradled birch panel, 24” x 24”, and I don’t know yet what I will do with them. I don’t intend to sell them. Perhaps they will be given to the victims’ families, if they are interested. Or perhaps used to raise funds for a worthy BLM cause. Hopefully, they will be of help somehow. They have already felt like a blessing for me while painting them.)

Tags BlackLivesMatter, JusticeforGeorgeFloyd, JusticeforBreonnaTaylor, Justice, Accountability, Equality, GeorgeFloyd, BreonnaTaylor, SayMyName
← Say My Name

Latest Posts

  • September 2020
    • Sep 28, 2020 Turn Off Your Mind, Relax, and Float Downstream Sep 28, 2020
  • August 2020
    • Aug 30, 2020 It's All a Dream We Dreamed Aug 30, 2020
  • July 2020
    • Jul 5, 2020 Say My Name Jul 5, 2020
  • June 2020
    • Jun 7, 2020 Black Lives Matter Jun 7, 2020

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