- When
- Sat., July 6, 2024, 11 a.m.ā4 p.m.
- Where
- Sculpture Court
- Tickets
- Inside Out is free, museum admission not included
The music and dance of Africa and the diaspora reverberate across culture, time and place. Join Legacy Arts and DJ Nate Da Barber for a day of live drumming, collective dance, and beats that both transport us and bring us home.
About Legacy Arts Project
The mission of the Legacy Arts Project, Inc. is to preserve, promote, and create Africana arts that honor the history, heritage, and cultures of Africa diaspora in ways that advance healing and wellness, education, and community empowerment.
The origins of the LAP begin with its founder Linda āImaniā Barrett and her love of the arts. An avid dancer and arts enthusiast, she was influenced by Selma Burke, an artist during the Harlem Renaissance, who created an arts center in Pittsburgh as an arm of her art center in Harlem, New York. There Sister ImaniĀ was exposed to a range of art forms that allowed her to experience the power of the African legacy. Around the same time, Sister Imani joined the Pittsburgh Black Theater Dance Ensemble, led by the late Bob Johnson. Here they experimented with art, delving into dance forms inspired by Africans throughout the Diaspora.
These experiences became a part of the foundation and formation of the LAP. From this platform, Sister ImaniĀ was able to bring together artists from the community to gather and share in expression. Drummers and dancers, elder and youth, played rhythms and danced. Interspersed with that has been spoken word, poetry, singing, and visual art. The LAP has been a space used to cultivate and share a variety of art forms, bringing the community together to grow.