Laini (Sylvia) Abernathy Explained

Laini (Sylvia) Abernathy
Birth Name:Sylvia
Nationality:American
Other Names:Laini Abernathy
Occupation:artist and activist
Known For:Chicago's Black arts movement
Notable Works:jazz record covers,
Wall of Respect
Spouse:Fundi (Billy) Abernathy
Education:Illinois Institute of Technology

Laini (Sylvia) Abernathy (died 2010) was an American artist and activist.[1] [2] She was an important figure in Chicago's Black arts movement, often working in collaboration with her husband, photographer Fundi (Billy) Abernathy.[3] [4]

Career

Abernathy studied at the Illinois Institute of Technology, located on the South Side of Chicago.[5] As a young artist, Abernathy was commissioned by Delmark Records to design album covers for jazz records, including such iconic releases as Sound (1966) by Roscoe Mitchell of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Sun Ra's Sun Song (1966), and Leon Sash's I Remember Newport (1967), some of which featured Fundi's photographs. Abernathy's designs typically worked with Art Deco-inspired typefaces and vibrant color block patterns mirroring the deconstructive, forward-thinking nature of the music. She was working during a time when few African-Americans held positions of creative authority on the visual side of the predominantly Black jazz movement -- jazz album design, popularized by designers such as Paul Bacon and Reid Miles, made use of bold abstract forms and negative space to subvert the racist stereotypes associated with black music in previous decades. This art scene, however, was largely male-dominated and white, despite the progressive cultural integration it advocated.

In 1967, she joined the Organization of Black American Culture (OBAC), an organization founded to continue the legacy of Malcolm X after his assassination, promoting art, literature and music with a message of Black liberation and pride. Abernathy designed the layout of the Wall of Respect, a street mural that featured African American leaders.[6] Her design featured sections that were each designed to be filled by an artist or group of artists.[7] After changing her name to the Africanized Laini, she designed the 1970 experimental photo book β€œIn Our Terribleness (Some Elements and Meaning in Black Style)” featuring poetry by Amiri Baraka and images by her husband, Fundi.[8]

Abernathy died in 2010. She received little mainstream recognition, although her work helped to pioneer the avant-garde visual aesthetic now inseparably linked with 1960s experimental jazz music.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: From the Collection: Laini (Sylvia Abernathy). 2020-11-24. letterformarchive.org. 20 March 2019 . en.
  2. Web site: Laini (Sylvia Abernathy) at Fonts in Use. 2020-12-27. Fonts in Use.
  3. July 1968. Confrontation in Chicago. Negro Digest. 74–78. Google Books.
  4. Web site: Laini and Fundi (Sylvia and Billy) Abernathy - Race and the Design of American Life - The University of Chicago Library. 2020-12-27. www.lib.uchicago.edu.
  5. Nishikawa. Kinohi. June 2019. Reframing Blackness: The Installation Aesthetic of In Our Terribleness. Chicago Review. University of Chicago. 62. 4.
  6. Book: Crawford, Margo Nathalie. New Thoughts on the Black Arts Movement. Rutgers University Press. 2006. New Brunswick, N.J.. 24. Black Light on the Wall of Respect: The Chicago Black Arts Movement.
  7. Book: Zorach, Rebecca. Art for People's Sake: Artists and Community in Black Chicago, 1965–1975. Duke University Press. 2019. Durham and London. 59. Claiming Space, Being Public.
  8. January 1972. Books Received. Black World Digest. 21. 3. 97. Google Books.