The outdoor mural, titled "An Ode to Africa in the Americas," is a collaborative project of two dozen Black and Brown artists from the Roxbury community, led by Boston-based master muralist and mural director Roberto Chao, in a unique partnership with Roxbury Community College. It celebrates Africa’s rich history and culture as they have influenced and manifested on the American continent.
The mural crew’s collective vision honors and illustrates the past and present of Africa’s presence in the Americas in all its richness, complexity, devastation, resilience, pain, joy, beauty, creativity, and brilliance.
Located along the walkway between Buildings 3 and 4, the brightly colored 9’ x 85' mural is also visible from Columbus Avenue. From a distance, the vivid forms and colors invite viewers to come closer. Up close, visitors will appreciate its complex wealth of imagery and history. The 85-foot-long mural features themes of liberation and resistance, the African origins of life, celebration, and nature and foodways, illustrating the historic and ongoing impact of Africa throughout the Americas.
It was formally unveiled on November 3rd, 2023 as part of the College’s 50th anniversary celebration. Interim RCC President Jackie Jenkins-Scott, RCC Board of Trustees Chair, Suffolk County Sheriff Steven Tompkins, and Roxbury Community College Foundation Board Chair, Reverend Dr. Ray Hammond, shared remarks, along with Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s Roxbury Liaison Asha Janay, who presented master muralist Roberto Chao with a city proclamation, declaring November 3rd, 2023, “Roberto Chao Day”.
Curious about the carnival dancer? Or the Adinkra symbols? Explore the key elements and overarching themes by clicking on the four color section links of the mural below or scroll down to learn more.
Want to learn how the mural was made? Learn more on the Mural Making Process page!
The flow of the mural is a journey via the woven fabric and textile patterns featuring Bogolanfini mudcloth, hieroglyphic writing, Asante adinkra symbols, Yoruba adire indigo, Nsibidi writing, Kente cloth, Guatemalan, and Peruvian cultures. Which patterns or symbols catch your eye and why?
Within the textiles are examples of systems of writing and symbology from different cultures. The hieroglyphic text is taken from the cartouche of Kush Kingdom leader, King Aspelta, of which several of his artifacts during his reign are located at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts and National Center of Afro-American Artists. These pieces of ancient text from Eastern Africa are evidence of the role African people played in developing societies “rich with timeless literature, architecture, infrastructure and cosmologies.” Adinkra and Nsibidi symbols were even incorporated into enslaved Africans’ quilts, potentially acting as messages to enslaved folks trying to liberate themselves.
Given that the mural was designed to enliven a place of learning, the many quotes, slogans, and inspirational moments captured within the mural were all incorporated with an educational perspective in mind. Which words caught your eye? An African-American inventor and their invention perhaps? Or a poem? See if you can spot all the writings listed below (ordered from left to right and top to bottom of the mural)!
Writing |
Origin |
Source |
“Remember, Reclaim, Repair, Reimagine, Revolutionize” |
“An Ode to Africa in the Americas” mural crew, inspired by L’Merchie Frazier’s work |
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“The People Shall Govern” |
Medu Art Ensemble, South African Apartheid |
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Sankofa - “Know the past to build the future” |
Akan people of Ghana |
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اسمي عمر بن سعيد إن الله مع الصابرين (Paraphrase: I am Omar ibn Said. [Indeed, God is with the patient.]) |
Omar ibn Said |
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“A fallen branch cannot bear fruits on its own.” |
African proverb |
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“I’ve known rivers…ancient as the world…and older than human blood in human veins…My soul has grown deep like the rivers.” (Excerpt) |
Langston Hughes, “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” |
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“Knowledge is Power.” (Excerpt) |
Kofi Annan |
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Africa, kwenu! |
Igbo proverb |
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By any means necessary. |
Malcolm X |
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Men anpil chay pa lou. (Many hands make the burden light.) |
Haitian proverb |
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Music is the nurse of the soul. |
James Monroe Trotter |
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“Revolution in our lifetime.” |
Black Panther Party |
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I can't breathe. |
Eric Garner & George Floyd Jr. |
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Hijo del Fuego y del amor, ¡lucha! Tu herencia es el paraiso. (Child of fire and love, fight! Your inheritance is paradise.) |
Juan Antonio Corretjer |
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High on the Hog. |
American proverb |
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Sí, se puede. / Yes we can. |
Dolores Huerta (Origin)/President Barack Obama (with permission) |
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Mongo: Flu, Bad cold |
African dialect of Puerto Rico |
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“La patria es valor y sacrificio.” (The homeland is valor and sacrifice.) |
Pedro Albizu Campos |
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You will live free or die. |
Harriet Tubman |
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Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee. |
Muhammad Ali |
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El respeto al derecho ajeno es la paz. (Respect for the rights of others is peace.) |
Benito Juárez |
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"...le tronc de l’arbre de la liberté... repoussera car ses racines parce qu’elles sont profondes et nombreuses." (“[In overthrowing me, they have only felled] the trunk of the tree of liberty... will regrow from the roots for they are deep and numerous.”) |
Toussaint L’Overture |
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La mujer es la matriz creadora de todos las energías físicas y morales. (Woman is the creative source of all physical and moral energies.) |
Pedro Albizu Campos |
Frases célebres de Don Pedro Albizu Campos |
Still I rise. |
Maya Angelou |
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Black lives matter. |
Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi |
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Doorknob |
Osbourne Dorsey |
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Potato chips |
George Crum |
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Hot comb and pomades |
Madam CJ Walker |
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Quick mix theory |
Grandmaster Flash |
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Feeding tube |
Bessie Blount |
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Almanac and clock |
Benjamin Banneker |
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Leprosy treatment |
Alice Ball |
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Turntable scratching |
Grand Wizzard Theodore |
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Refrigeration |
Thomas Elkins |
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Ice cream scoop |
Alfred L. Cralle |
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Clothes dryer |
George T. Sampson |
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Dust pan |
Lloyd Ray |
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Railroad car coupler |
Andrew Beard |
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“We owe it to ourselves and to the next generation to conserve the environment so that we can bequeath our children a sustainable world that benefits all.” |
Wangari Maathai |
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Kwanzaa’s Seven Principles: Umoja, Kujichagulia, Ujima, Ujamaa, Nia, Kuumba, and Imani |
Maulana Karenga |
The struggle for freedom in the face of oppression is one of the most important contributions from the African continent to the Americas in particular. This history of liberation is illustrated by shadows of ancestors facing a Black fist in formation as it rises from the ground, a flow from the origins of humanity to grassroots resistance. The pyramids, hieroglyphics, and Adinkra symbols surrounding the brown-hued scene help to connect this history of liberation struggle to the proud and influential cultures of African peoples.
A reference to L’Merchie Frazier’s original art piece, The Holler, 2019, Frazier recalls the motif of the men at the base of the pyramids to anchor our presence geographically in Nubia and Kemet. The ancestors’ call is from our ancient beginnings - the call across the waters arcing millenia along with our stories that reach from the east to the west. Their holler is for our redemption and our remembrance from whence we came.
The Black Power Fist is recognized as a symbol of resistance. Muralist Jonathan Innocent, who created the image, describes his reimagined Black Power Fist this way: “ The image of a hand reaching up from the ground signifies the birth of Black radical tradition. It is also an image that conveys the oppressed people of the earth rising to claim their liberation, and harkens back to the masses which Frantz Fanon calls ‘the wretched of the earth.’” The date palm tree within the open fist recalls the life sustaining attributes of the date palm itself and the Nile River by which it grows. Innocent adds that it is also “an homage to Haiti, the first [Black] nation to free itself from its colonizers in 1804. A palm tree is featured prominently in the center of the Haitian flag, symbolizing national pride.”
The protestors and protest signs are inspired by art related to social and political movements throughout the Black diaspora. The mural includes references to the struggle against South African Apartheid, African American labor struggles, and the Black Lives Matter movement.
Waters bring and create life, as illustrated by the symbols and motifs selected for the blue scene. A hand dripping with indigo ink, ready to dye adire cloth, is engulfed by the frothy blues of the waterfall. The iconic baobab “tree of life” is draped by an African proverb, while the schooner, Clotilda, turns eastward home, back to Africa.
Dosha Ellis Beard, textile and mural artist, shares the historical significance of the schooner, Clotilda, and its relevance to her.
Natural indigo dyeing is a process associated with many traditional cultures, especially that of cloth production in West Africa. This practice of cloth production was relocated to the southern plantations and places as far as Brazil during the 18th and 19th centuries through the labor of enslaved people. The identifying marks of indigo cloth visible on the hands and skin of the dyers is the same blue that was seen in the surface of the soil where the cloth was hung to dry.
The image of three generations of women braiding each other’s hair represents heritage, legacy, and survival. In discussing the center positioning of the braiding women, muralist Anna Francella Rodriguez explains that the art of braiding hair, “its impact and its importance transcends the [African] diaspora”, finding reflection in the indigenous cultures of the Americas as well. Enslaved Africans would carry rice, grains, and other seeds in their braided hairstyles to nourish themselves on the horrific trans-Atlantic journey and to plant in the new land they would inhabit.
Bright yellows and oranges invite mural visitors to turn their attention to themes of joy, celebration, and the vigor of the present. Look for signs of unity, ritualistic scenes of joy, evidence of success in industry, and slogans of inspiration.
In honor of the vibrant cultural carnival celebrations that occur within the diaspora, the Vejigante and Benin masks were included in the center of the mural to honor these fruitful celebrations. The Vejigante mask is a demon figure that is a staple of Puerto Rican and Dominican Carnival culture. Oba Esigie's ivory mask is worn in Benin in annual ceremonies of spiritual renewal and purification.
Rooted in organized acts of rebellion against enslavement on the island of Trinidad and Tobago, Carnival today is a celebration of freedom throughout the Caribbean and Caribbean diaspora around the world. The mural features carnival characters playing ‘mas’, short for masquerade, in extravagant feathery costumes, chipping, marching and liming in pure jubilation. The drummer is a celebration of women djembe percussionists and performers who come from places like Guinea-Bissau, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, and Atlanta, Georgia, wearing traditional African attire and are part of the relocation of music and culture synthesized in the Americas. The lacey textiles and patterns are applied on translucent paper to achieve the texture of African lace.
The African continent is placed slightly right of center of the mural, underscoring Africa’s dynamic and ever evolving impact on the Americas. The size of the Cape Verde islands in relation to the contiguous African continent is purposely made larger to demonstrate the outsized influence of Cape Verde in Massachusetts, which holds the largest Cape Verdean population in the United States. Concentric circles over the outline of the African continent is a reference to both Anansi the Spider, a familiar trickster character from Ghanaian folktales who has made his way around the world, and to the concept of “the web of life,” which originates and continues to emanate from Africa. Within the web are proverbs and quotes and the names of African American inventors and their inventions, symbolizing the “webs” that Africa continues to weave beyond its borders. Take a look at the Quotes and Sayings section above for more information.
Four members of the mural collective photographed their own arms linked together to create this image. The mural team was drawn to numerous African symbols and proverbs expressing unity and collectivity, mirrored in the Pan Africanist philosophy of Ubuntu. Ubuntu is a Nguni Bantu word loosely translated to mean “I am because we are.” One popular image for Ubuntu is one of four arms of different skin tones holding each other at the forearm or wrist.
The African fish eagle is a reverential nod to the original "Africa to America" mural, which stood 4’ x 40’ on Guild Row in Nubian Square, Roxbury, from 2012–2018. It featured African flora and fauna and was painted by youths in a Madison Park Development Corporation summer program, directed by Roberto Chao and assisted by Aziza Robinson-Goodnight.
Vibrant shades of green call to attention one more time the monumental influence of the past on the future. Woven throughout this section are themes of nature, foodways as shown in agricultural, cooking, and eating practices, and the youth. The first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, Wangari Maathai, challenges mural visitors in her own words to consider what they must do next to guarantee a sustainable future for the generations of tomorrow.
Founded in 1966 by African-American activist Maulana Karenga, Kwanzaa is an annual celebration of African-American culture from December 26 to January 1. The Seven Principles (“Nguzo Saba”) - Umoja/Unity, Kujichagulia/Self-determination, Ujima/Collective work and responsibility, Ujamaa/Cooperative economics, Nia/Purpose, Kuumba/Creativity, and Imani/Faith - are woven into the fabric of the kente cloth to compel mural visitors to consider how each of the values are represented within the green section.
This market cornucopia shows the diversity of some of the fruits and vegetables indigenous to the African continent, such as okra, watermelon, kola nuts, ackee, yams, and rice (Oryza glaberrima). Through global trade routes, the forced migration journey, and the discovery of substitutes in the Americas, other crops, like sweet potatoes, mangoes, plantains, and scotch bonnet peppers, have become staples of African and African diasporic appetites. The market stall features this rich tapestry of foods while also highlighting their names in different African and African diasporic languages: ackee (“ankye” in Ghanian Twi), okra (“okuru” in Nigerian Igbo), plantain (“plátano” in Spanish), watermelon (“بطيخ” in Arabic), yam (“irui” in Nigerian female Ubang), sweet potato (“patat” in Haitian Creole), mango (“mangue” in French), rice (“ceebu” in Senegalese Wolof), scotch bonnet pepper (“peppa” in Jamaican English), and kola nuts (“noz di kola” in Cape Verdean Creole).
You will also notice that the table for the fruits and vegetables has a uniquely designed cloth. The cloth designer, artist Bosede Opetubo describes the cloth as a “homage to quilters and printmakers across time and continents, drawing inspiration from an actual quilt made by a member of the African American Quilt Guild in Durham, North Carolina. The vivid pattern, with batik and Ankara fabrics arranged in diagonal rows, evokes rushing water, blood vessels or rows of crops. In the quiltmaker’s own words, “my quilts represent the unspoken, while capturing the essence of struggle, resilience and triumph.”
African traditions and knowledge permanently shaped practices of agriculture, cooking, and eating across the American continent, from agricultural techniques like rice cultivation and animal herding, to cooking techniques like barbecuing meats, deep frying fish, and leaf-wrapped steaming. Hands preparing foods, from pounding fufu to cutting okra to cooking stews, highlight food historian Michael Twitty’s profound observation, “The food is an archive, a keeper of secrets.” Borne out of the horrific history of colonization, imperialistic trade, and trans-atlantic slavery is a tradition of resilience and adaptation that can be seen in the dishes of the African diaspora today.
The mural could not have been designed, painted, or installed without the commitment, dedication, and exuberance of the mural crew who contributed substantially to the project. The joyful, collaborative spirit from the team was present throughout with excellent leadership and guidance from Director Roberto Chao, with project coordination assistance by Mark Schafer. Thank you to Akunna Eneh, Anna Francella Rodriguez, Bosede A. Opetubo, Chanise Vanes, Cristóbal Sánchez, Dosha Ellis Beard, Jonathan Innocent, L’Merchie Frazier, Lisa Nagid, Maddu Huacuja, Melissa Lin, Natalia Zuleta, Rosalyn Delores Elder, Silvina Mizrahi, and Tamyya Wright. Below is a small selection of artist profiles for mural visitors to gain an appreciation of the wonderful talent and giving spirit of the Roxbury community.
Dosha Ellis Beard is a multidisciplinary performing, fiber, and visual artist from Boston, Massachusetts. Watch her interview to learn more about why she joined the mural project and its personal significance to her.
Roberto Chao is a Jamaica Plain resident, originally from Uruguay. His passion for art and muralism has taken him to Boston as well as other cities, like Lowell, Salem, Worcester, and Manchester, NH., and countries like Uruguay, Puerto Rico, México, Cuba, and Nicaragua. He is most animated when working directly with the communities that his art strives to illustrate. Watch his interview to learn more about his history and his commitment to community participation in his artistry.
L’Merchie Frazier is a visual activist and artist/educator/consultant and currently serves as the Director of Education at the Museum of African-American History, Boston / Nantucket. She also serves as an art commissioner for the State of Massachusetts. She is best known for her evocative fiber and metal sculptures, innovative mixed media installations, and stunning hand-crafted beaded jewelry. Her art serves as threads of memory, reclaimed from the icons that bring recognition, salvation, and redemption. Her work has been exhibited in public and private collections of numerous institutions— University of Vermont, the American Museum of Art and Design, New York, The White House, and the Smithsonian Institute, Washington, DC. Watch her interview to learn more about her contributions to the mural project and her reflections on sharing history and culture through visual storytelling.
Anna Francella Rodriguez is a Roxbury resident of Dominican descent. She majored in community health and education at Tufts University, and recently graduated from Simmons University with a master’s degree in social work. While working as a licensed clinical therapist, Rodriguez continues to hone her craft as a visual artist. You can find her digital art on Instagram, @_ellainspires, as well as her mural in Nubian Square, titled "Mind over Matter." She played a substantial role blending ideas for the mural digitally to meet the themes and images discussed by the group. She also worked on much of the lettering, bringing forward her aesthetic for vibrant color and positive messaging into the mural.
When asked about her reflections and lessons learned from the mural process, Rodriguez shared, “The outcome of this work was well beyond what I could have imagined, and I am honored to have been a part of this, especially as the person chosen to make the initial digital rendition of the mural. I thought I was not ready to play such a central role, but through the process, I learned that growth requires risk and discomfort. I also saw the power of community art and the importance of being able to lean on each other, and share responsibility for a shared goal. It was a lesson that I will carry throughout my lifetime."
Chanise Vanes is a Roxbury resident, born to an African-American mother and a Trinidadian father. Currently finishing her bachelor’s degree in illustration at Lesley University in Cambridge, Vanes shares her growing art portfolio on Instagram and Tiktok, @chanise.illustrates. She was a major contributor to color-blending, portraiture and figures, notably the protestors and the three generations of women doing each other's hair in the middle of the mural.
She worked with Roberto Chao previously on the "Afro-Latin Music and Dance" mural in Mozart Park, Jamaica Plain, as well as other public art projects, however she shared her excitement for getting more involved in this mural’s creation and design in collaboration with others. “I learned how to work with people while also putting my artistic vision forward. I learned that my voice, my opinions, as well as my art work all matter and deserve a space in this world,” shared Vanes. Each artist joined the mural crew for different reasons, and when asked why the mural was important to her, Vanes reflected, “The world we live in moves very quickly and often tries to skim past our history as well as our past and our current hardships. But we as a community deserve to be heard, and when we come together for that reason, beautiful things can come out of it.”