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Sana Musasama
Sana Musasama and Janet Olivia Henry for OHP.png
Musasama and Janet Olivia Henry
Born
Education BA The City College of New York (1974), MFA Alfred State College of Ceramics (1987)
Known for Ceramic, sculpture
Awards Anonymous Was a Woman Award (2002)

Sana Musasama is an African-American ceramic and mixed-media artist based in New York City. Her artistic practice parallels her work as an educator and commitment to human rights causes especially the ... of women. Her work has been recognized with numerous awards including an Anonymous Was a Woman Award in 2002, Joan Mitchell Painters and Sculptors Grant in 2013, and was a Studio Museum in Harlem Artist-in-Residence in 1983–84. Musasama is an associate adjunct professor at Hunter College.

Early life and education

Musasama was born in Saint Albans, New York.

She holds a BA in Ceramics and Education from City College (1974) and an MFA from Alfred State College of Ceramics (1987). She continued her ceramic studies at the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, Montana; the Gakium Designer College in Tokyo, Japan; the Tuscarora International School of Ceramics in Tuscarora, Nevada; and at Mende Pottery in Mendeland, Sierra Leone.

Career

Musasama's artistic practice and work as an educator is informed by her extensive travels to Africa, Asia, and Latin America including countries such as Sierra Leone, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Japan to learn about non-Western cultures, specifically as relates to womanhood and socio-political issues impacting women. ..... For over 20 years Musasama has researched these issues and created artwork in response.

Maple Tree series (1992–1994)

Five of Musasama's Maple Tree series sculptures were exhibited at the Fine Arts Gallery at Long Island University in Southampton, NY in April 1998. The Maple Tree series is a group of about thirty totemic ceramic sculptures based on the Maple Tree Movement, who were a group of abolitionists from the 1790s that advocated ending the sugar cane industry and thus ending slavery on West Indian sugar plantations. They hoped maple syrup would replace sugar cane eliminating the need for slave labor. The sculptures in the series were made using various clay bodies and resemble trees with organic and bodily extensions. They are scaled to the human body, ranging from 3.5 to over 5 feet, and in addition to ceramic are made from materials such as stone, beads, and moss. Some of the sculptures from the series were created at artist residencies, and are named after the place where they were made.

Stop (1994) and Sugar vs Sap (1992), two sculptures from the Maple Tree series, were exhibited in the No Longer Empty: Southeast Queens Biennial in 2018.

Public collections

Musasama's work is held in the collections of the Studio Museum in Harlem, Hood Museum of Art, Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum, Mint Museum of Craft and Design, the European Ceramic Center in Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands; the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, Montana, and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York.

Exhibitions

Selected solo exhibitions

  • 2010: Unknown/Unnamed, June Kelly Gallery, New York
  • 2010: The Hand, Meta House Gallery, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
  • 2009: Women, Chatham University, Pittsburgh. PA
  • 2007: A Season of Abundance: The Maple Tree Series of Sana Musasana, curated by chief curator, David Revere McFadden, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; catalogue
  • 2006: ETHOS, Social Consciousness and Craft, Penland School of Craft, Penland, NC
  • 2005: Shhh…Secrets, Status, Society, June Kelly Gallery, New York
  • 2001: Outer Beauty, Inner Anguish, June Kelly Gallery, New York
  • 1998: Maple Tree Series, Fine Arts Gallery, Southampton College of Long Island University, Southampton,  New York
  • 1984: From the Studio: The Studio Museum in Harlem Artist-in-Residence, 1984, curated by Schroeder Cherry, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York

Selected group exhibitions

  • 2016: 50 Women-A Celebration of Women’s Contribution to Ceramics, American Jazz Museum, Kansas City, MO
  • 2013: Body & Soul,  Museum of Arts and Design, New York, NY
  • 2013: History, Haunting and Palimpsests, Anya & Shiva Gallery, John Jay College, NY
  • 2009: Modern and Contemporary Art at Dartmouth, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth, NH
  • 2006: Edges of Grace, Fuller Craft Museum, Boston, MA
  • 2002: New Works, Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
  • 1999: Cultural Influences in Craft, North Carolina Central University, Durham, NC
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