Friday, September 28, 2012

Such a fortunate life



After Simms told me that the Cranbrook board had insisted that he live off campus, rather than integrating him with the other students, I asked about his experience of racism. "I don’t know what to say about that," he said, "because I have found out, after all these years I’ve lived, all people have problems with other peoples."

Something in his response prompted me to ask if he felt he had had a fortunate life. While he affirms that he has had a "very fortunate life," he goes on to express anxiety about the fragile state of the world and the things that he feels students today are not learning.

How I got to Cranbrook



Simms was the first African American to graduate from Cranbrook Academy of Art, which is known as the cradle of American modernism.

In this clip, he recalls how his fellow students helped him overcome the board's reluctance to allow him to live on campus. The off campus room the school administrators found for him was above a black funeral home.

Though he refers to the painter Zoltan Sepeshy as the first director of Cranbrook, when the school opened in 1932, the president was Eliel Saarinen, the Finnish architect who had designed the buildings, the campus, and the curriculum. 

To get some sense of the atmosphere Simms found at Cranbrook, watch this short video about an exhibition of the work of Saarinen's son Eero, also an architect and Cranbrook graduate, at the academy's museum.

Observing and Teaching



Simms was talking about being a good observer, so I asked him if observing was a skill that could be taught. Listening to his responses, and reading his expressions, I can't help but wonder about his relationship with his teachers, and his relationship with his students. How were those relationships different?

The sculpture you can see in the background, through the car window, is his second version of Jonah and the Whale, a subject he executed at least three times. There are a number of parallels between Simms' story and Jonah's story.