Five members of the black community discussed the question of black artists' responsibility to society Friday night at the Kennedy School of Government's ARCO Forum, as part of the Kuumba Singers' Black Arts Festival.
Werner Sollors, Cabot professor of English and a professor of Afro-American studies, moderated the panel, which was entitled "From The Cosby Show to Booty Call, from Stevie Wonder to Master P: How is Black Identity Reflected Through Our Art?"
Nearly 200 people attended the panel, which kicked off a weekend of events.
The panelists included VIBE magazine writer/research editor Ayana Byrd, New York-based Reverend James A. Forbes Jr., Honey magazine founder Kierna Mayo, hip-hop political organization A Movement for Change founder Conrad Muhammad and Ahmir "Brother ?uestion" Thompson, co-founder of the hip-hop group The Roots.
The Brothers of Kuumba followed with two songs and then Sollors began the hour-long discussion of what, if any, responsibility black artists have to the black community.
Muhammad said that some might find the question of an artist's accountability to their community "strange."
Muhammad said black artists sense of accountability originated because in previous years being an artist was one of the ways in which black people could achieve national prominence.
"Where our community is concerned, artists were the first images that the mainstream of the country saw and so an ethos developed that you have to make your people proud," Muhammad said.
The panelists also addressed the economic rewards of some artistic fields.
"I think we've turned art into an act of survival," Thompson said.
Byrd said that today, black peoples' motivations for becoming artists are very different than they were ten or 20 Muhammad added that for black people, music hasbecome a "vehicle" for success. But, he said, "if[a drug dealer-turned-rapper's] video glamorizesthe violence and the murder, maybe you'veeliminated one criminal but you've created 30,000more across the country." The meaning of hip-hop was also a theme of thediscussion. "Hip-hop has seized the cultural stage,"Muhammad said. Muhammad said he sees hip-hop as havingsocietal, economic and public policy aspects--andthat A Movement for Change wants to run tenhip-hop candidates for office in 2001. Muhummad pointed to former president RonaldReagan as an example of an artist gaining power. Read more in NewsRecommended Articles