Hughes. Lucy Gellman Photos. |
Alyssa Hughes was rocking back and forth to an impromptu band. Behind her, Martell Henry-Wilson set a beat for the group, drum pumping clear and sharp through the space like a heartbeat. Jonathan Triplett and Danny Peters joined on keyboard, working out a quick, clean staccato. Hughes twisted a little at the waist, bobbed her head. She came to the lip of the stage and brought the mic to her mouth.
Take me to a place I can escape
Away from where the demons start to chase
Me inside my soul
Gravity, gravity, gravitayyyy
Saturday evening, the Waterbury-based musician was one of several performers at “Home Is Where The Art Is,” an exhibition, concert, and fundraiser to fight homelessness in New Haven. It was held in the basement of Dixwell Avenue Congregational United Church of Christ, which hosted the even as part of its three years of celebration leading up to its bicentennial in 2020.
“This is to break the stigma around homelessness,” Nardini said between musical acts. “To try to get people to understand that we’re all the same. The biggest thing is to understand how much interacting and having human conversations can do.”
Around the room, attendees took time to peruse handmade jewelry, painted t-shirts, bright oils and pen and colored pencil drawings that lined tables and dotted the walls. From the back of the space, the smell of rice and peas and vegan Jamaican food mingled with chocolate chip cookies and a bowl of oranges. At the front, a band jammed onstage. Artists arranged their tables around the edges, walking around as a rotating cast of artists took the stage.
In a way, he said with a grin, it was the unexpected push into visual art that he needed. He loved dance. But after leaving Bowen-Peters, he realized he loved art even more.
By the 1990s, he loved it enough for it to save his life. In 1992, he left his family and baby daughter for Maine, seeking treatment for a serious crack addiction. While in a psychiatric hospital there, he started playing with pen-and-ink pointillism, integrating it into his work before he had ever heard of the artists who made it famous in nineteenth-century France. When he returned to New Haven in 1994, he continued making his art, finding joy every time he returned to his sketchbooks.
“It always had a very positive message, and kind of showed me the person I wanted to become,” he said Saturday. “Art is this message to the universe.”
Beside him, several untitled works glinted in their laminated covers. In one, roots hung limp and jellyfish-like in a sea of green and brown shapes, bulbous and gathering as they reached upward. Above a midpoint, they exploded again in tentacles, snaking over the top of the work. In the backdrop, yellows, greens and reds bled together, prismatic as they cut through the work.
Back onstage, Kaïna Mondesir had gotten the audience into a groove with a cover of Nina Simone’s “Baltimore,” subbing the words “New Haven” at the chorus as she half-sang, half-asked the audience Ain't it hard just to live? At the back of the room, artist and “church member since birth” Dena Donaldson let the words coast over her. After hearing about the event from other members of the church, she said she had been excited to participate, handing out flyers to get the word out in the Dixwell community.
Up front, the audience filled with a few new members. Mondesir gave the mic to co-organizer Allison Brown, who told the audience that she had prayed about the event. In April, Brown attended the first “Home Is Where The Art Is,” and wanted to become part of the efforts to counter homelessness with art in New Haven. She quoted James 2:1-4, her voice lifting up to the ceiling as she spoke.
“Suppose a man comes into your meeting wearing a gold ring and fine clothes, and a poor man in filthy old clothes also comes in,” she began. “If you show special attention to the man wearing fine clothes and say, ‘Here’s a good seat for you,’ but say to the poor man, ‘You stand there’ or ‘Sit on the floor by my feet,’ have you not discriminated among yourselves and become judges with evil thoughts?”
Then she looked around, handed off the mic to spoken word artist Myles White like a relay baton, and let the show unfold.
For more from the event, click on the video below or check out The Arts Paper at @newhavenarts on Instagram.