General admission for children 17 years and under is always free

Ifé Franklin

Artist and Community Activist (she/her)

I'm always on the path of freedom. I feel like it's imperative that I am free - as a woman, as a Black woman and as a lesbian.

Ifé Franklin’s practice involves several genres of art-making inspired by slave narratives, dreams, dance, song, and visions. Over the last decade she has been developing The Indigo Project which honors the lives and history of formerly enslaved Africans/African-Americans who labored to produce materials that generated the wealth of nations. At the center are Franklin’s Ancestor Slave Cabins which often incorporate Adire fabric, an indigo-dyed cotton cloth decorated using a resist technique from the Yoruba culture. These assemblages are built in collaboration with the community and cultivate connections that promote understanding and healing from the hard history of enslavement. In 2018 Franklin published, The Slave Narrative of Willie Mae, a fictional account of her great-grandmother’s escape from slavery to freedom. The work was adapted into a performance piece and a short film in 2021.

Franklin’s work has been exhibited at The Slave Dwellings Project in South Carolina, the North Charleston Arts Festival, and throughout the Boston area including, Medicine Wheel Productions, Villa Victoria, The Eliot School of Applied Arts, Franklin Park, and the Royall House and Slave Quarters. Her work is in the permanent collection of The Fitchburg Museum of Art, Fitchburg MA, UMass Boston, and The National Museum of African American History and Culture, Washington D.C. In 2017 Franklin was awarded The Creative City Grant by the New England Foundation for the Arts. Originally from Washington D.C, she graduated from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and has lived and worked in Roxbury MA for many years. 

Listen to Ifé’s story

00:00 / 08:55

Join us!

Join the project's creative leads and its participants for a discussion of the Black queer experience in Boston. This conversation takes place at 7 pm during our Free First Thursday program on March 3.