I grew up in Little Rock, during the era of efforts to integrate Central High School. My parents were middle-american activists who participated fully in these struggles. At college I met activist coastal intellectuals and became enmeshed in struggles against the Vietnam War and for Black Liberation. I was drafted into the US Army and served two years as a private along the Iron Curtain. During my teens and twenties, I developed a belief in a “preferential option for the poor.” As an adult I have engaged in activities along this trajectory as a union and civil rights lawyer in the South. During middle age I went back to school, as I felt a need to analyze my experiences. After this study, I participated in academia, including serving as a Fellow in Ethics at Harvard University and a Visiting Scholar at CUNY.
My art comes from my life experiences. I try to maintain an unflinchingly frank and honest view of what I see, and practice compassion to those who navigate in their reality. I have been a writer for several decades and currently create in photography and collage. Like Elaine Scary, I believe in the connection between beauty and justice. I make art from what I am doing, and from what I see when I am wandering and wondering. As my inspiration and materials come directly from my work life, my practice could be described as participatory action art, building on theories of Paolo Freire.