Seven Gullah Geechee women dance in a loose circle across a Lowcountry clearing bordered by marsh water and tall grass. Two large trees rise like a frame at either side, their branches meeting overhead and opening onto a bright blue sky streaked with soft clouds and a few birds in flight. The women’s skin is painted in deep brown and blue-black tones, and their features are intentionally simplified, shifting attention to gesture, rhythm, and shared presence. One woman at the far left beats a tambourine. The others lift their arms, turn at the waist, or step barefoot through the grass, their long dresses swinging outward in violet, blue, white, gold, red, and green. Several wear white headwraps. One carries a broad straw hat and another a green hat with ribbon. The painting feels musical as hems flutter, scarves stream, and the group’s movement carries the eye from figure to figure as if the dance continues beyond the frame. American artist Sonja Griffin Evans, born and raised in Beaufort, South Carolina, builds her art from Gullah Geechee memory, place, and survival. In “Freedom Dance,” joy is not decorative … it is historical and communal. The title invites connections to emancipation, Freedom’s Eve, Juneteenth, and other Black traditions of gathering, praise, and release. Evans centers dignity, beauty, and motion with an insistence that Black Southern womanhood be seen in celebration as well as endurance. That approach aligns with her larger practice, which she has described as a way to honor her ancestors and “continue to tell their stories.” The marsh setting, the ring-like choreography, and the women’s vivid clothing make the painting feel both contemporary and ancestral, grounded in the Sea Islands yet resonant far beyond them. Seen within the context of Black Southern Belles and Evans’s longer-running American Gullah exhibitions, the work is an affirmation that cultural memory lives most powerfully when it is embodied, shared, and danced forward.
“Freedom Dance” by Sonja Griffin Evans (American) - Mixed media / c. 2017–2018 - Brookgreen Gardens (Murrells Inlet, South Carolina) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #SonjaGriffinEvans #BrookgreenGardens #BlackArt #art #arttext #AfricanAmericanArt #Gullah #AfricanAmericanArtist #WomenArtists