Artist, fashion designer to host gallery Saturday at Stillman Art Walk

Courtesy of Stillman College

College will also unveil Dr. Cynthia Warrick Art Gallery
Ā Atlanta-based creative Melissa Mitchell is the featured artist for the 6thĀ annual MLK Legacy Art Walk at Stillman College.

The Art Walk will be held from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday at the multi-purpose facility located next to the Hay College Center, where Mitchell will display both traditional art and wearables inspired by Black history and her Bahamian heritage. Additionally, Mitchell will have selected works of art for sale.

The MLK Legacy Art Walk, created to showcase artwork that reflects Black history and culture and works created by Black artists, is open and free to the public.

Mitchellā€™s vibrant and colorful style hallmark both her traditional art pieces, such as canvases and murals, and womenā€™s fashion designs, which include casual, athletic and swim wear.

Mitchellā€™s art features and partnerships include global deals with Spanx and Foot Locker, as well as ESSENCE Magazine, Black Enterprise, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Huffington Post, Peloton, Cadillac, Microsoft, Pepsi, CNN, The Home Depot, MARTA, and more.

Mitchellā€™s business acumen has accelerated her learning curve for monetizing her work; Mitchell first picked up a paint brush just 9 years ago and has since combined her career experiences in marketing and IT with an enterprising foundation laid by her parents to become an ā€œanomaly to most artists and businesswomen.ā€

ā€œI donā€™t subscribe to artist definitions,ā€ she said. ā€œIā€™m a businesswoman who is a creative, and I want to be around people who are business-minded.ā€

MitchellĀ said her fatherā€™s death in 2010 inspired her first works of art but also made her take inventory into her own life and happiness.

ā€œWhen my father passed, I thought, ā€˜there has to be more to life than go to work, get married, and have kids,ā€™ā€ she said. ā€œMy inspiration would come from healing and finding a non-verbal way to express my emotions. Art became my platform ā€“ a silent investor to find the new life I was searching for.ā€

In addition to her Bahamian heritage, Mitchell says a primary source of inspiration for her art is the book ā€œThey Came Before Columbus,ā€ by Dr. Ivan Van Sertima, who chronicles African exploration and cultural influences in the Americas as far back as the 1300s. Mitchell said Van Sertimaā€™s philosophy of how Africansā€™ strength and might influenced the Aztecs inspired her media to ā€œtransition from abstract art to my interpretation of what [Aztec] faces looked like in color.ā€

ā€œFor about the past four or five years, I keep finding these faces in my imagination,ā€ Mitchell said. ā€œFrom there, I started to channel history a bit deeper: I found a list of names of slaves who were lost at sea and began naming each of my pieces to honor ancestors.ā€

Stillman to hold ribbon-cutting for Warrick Gallery

Prior to the start of the MLK Legacy Art Walk, Stillman will unveil the Dr. Cynthia Warrick Art Gallery in the multi-purpose building next to the Hay College Center. A ribbon-cutting ceremony for the grand opening of the Warrick Gallery will be held at 11 a.m. at the multi-purpose building, just prior to the Art Walk. Light refreshments will be served during the ceremony.

The Warrick Gallery will hold nine works of art, including four pieces byĀ Frank Kelly, Jr.; single pieces byĀ Frank FrazierĀ andĀ William T. Williams; and more.