1media/15-949.jpg2021-04-05T20:23:59-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e387063Michael Massenburg 7011 South Figueroa Street, inside the Progressive Home for the Elderly 1998plain2021-05-18T14:54:22-07:00USC Digital Library1998(Artist) Massenburg, Michael33.976214,-118.282671Dunitz, Robin J.Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
This page is referenced by:
1media/15-949.jpgmedia/15-949.jpg2021-05-01T21:12:23-07:00Home and Jazz Giants5Michael Massenburg 7011 South Figueroa Street, inside the Progressive Home for the Elderly 1998plain2021-05-18T15:57:15-07:00199833.976214,-118.282671Michael Massenburg was born in San Diego, California, and studied at California State University, Long Beach and Otis Art Institute. In Home and Jazz Giants, Massenburg depicts palm trees, which are an iconic feature of the landscape of South Los Angeles. As in most of his artwork, Home and Jazz Giants depicts African Americans to highlight honor, unity, and strength in the Black community.
Massenburg’s Home and Jazz Giants is located at 7011 South Figueroa Street, inside the Progressive Home for the Elderly. The mural’s representations of prominent African American jazz figures convey a sense of pride and nostalgia. In the way Massenburg depicts figures as overlapping with one another, the artist suggests that they are all connected as part of the same community. The first panel on the left depicts a woman as the largest figure which suggests the significance and centrality of strong women within the African American community. The color palette in the mural gestures towards pan-African unity: yellow, red, blue, and green are also present on the flags of African nations. Abstract shapes in the mural suggest the form of a topographic map, in which divided landmasses overlap one another. One might read these forms as the African diaspora blending into a united community aware of its past, present, and future potentialities.