Excerpt:
...From the late 1960's through the 1970's, after the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., a remarkable
cultural phenomenon unfolded in the southern United
States and went almost unnoticed. As if in unspoken
response to a trumpet's reveille, black people throughout
the region came out from their houses, or factories,
or in from the fields, and began to create artistic
environments, or 'yard shows,' so the outside world
could see what had been previously expressed in secrecy
inside and behind their residences. It had been there
for centuries, this yard-show tradition, but almost
no one outside the culture knew about it, this not-for-our-eyes
cubism, fauvism, expressionism, surrealism, dada, abstract
expressionism, pop, minimalism, graffiti, postmodern,
neo-this, neo-that, neo-everything. Or proto-everything.
In the 1970's Eldren M. Bailey came out, as did Vernon
Burwell, Sam Doyle, Ralph Griffin, Lonnie Holley, Joe
Light, Nellie Mae Rowe, Purvis Young, and so many others
-- too many to count, and probably many others whom
we never knew about. Also in that decade Mary T. Smith
decided to start expressing ideas that had been in her
head since childhood. With a private space that was
hers to create, to define, and to decorate, she would
spotlight herself for the world surrounding her. It
was a world of people who had, at their worst, laughed
at her and been contemptuous of her, and, at their best,
simply tolerated her as someone who was different and
insignificant. Now it was Mary T. Smith's turn.