Afro Futuristic visual art is born of Rhythmism! Onli's Future-Primitif works have been shown to positive acclaim with The Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Cool Globes, The Tubman Museum, New Museum of Contemporary Art, NY, The Krannert Museum, The DuSable Museum of Black History, The Museum of Science & Industry, Chicago Children's Museum, & The FIAP in Paris. Educators, enthusiasts, collectors, curators, collectors, & critics are.. WELCOME!
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
Friday, January 21, 2022
Today we talk about how to create a connection with your audience by making them understand the context of your art.
So I pose a question for you today:
What is one way you can point out to your audience how your art relates to your signature story?"
Long before the trending of the powerfully embraced opulence of the term, "Afrofuturism" the 18-year-old Turtel Onli founded the Black Arts Guild in 1970 as an autonomous creative exclusive, self-sustainable think-tank for young, Black, gifted, and dedicated visual art students to facilitate their transition from talented but frustrated Art Students into life-long artistic professionals.
Onli later became a contributing illustrator of JPC's charming educational title. "Ebony Jr." as shown in the above sample from the poem. "Big Mama's Wisdom".
The image above was created by Onli in 1975. B.A.G. used the then negative, controversial yet health giving watermelon as its logo and did watermelon infused artwork as part of its initiation process. They even owned and re-contextualized "Piccinnini" and Mamie images that up until then were used to demean the dignity of Black Americans. This too was part of the Black Cultural Revolution.
Because of this and many other issues B.A.G. and so much of Onli's and B.A.G.'s innovative efforts and impact were censored, overlooked or assigned to others rather than speak, write or document his and their plain truth. Therefore, here is a flow of images and chronological events. This is his life and story during these years.
Onli contributed published album covers designs and conceptual treatments to important labels or brands such as American Variety Entertainment, The Proctor & Gardener Advertisement Agency and Casablanca Records during the pre-digital era.
Even though the 'Stones directed it and really loved it. The above drawing was part of that project. It was not for the outside cover but for the inner paper sleeve that would have contained the actual disc.
Onli continued to grow his watermelon themed body of Rhythmistic art. He calls this collection "Passion Fruit". It was during his tenure directing B.A.G. that Onli and Dalton Brown started using the term "Rhythmism". Onli later refined the term to include the Future-Primitif processing of concepts.
He worked for the Paris Metro Magazine and MODE Avante Garde Magazine along with winning a national drawing competition that led to his having a solo exhibition at the FIAP in Paris. Here he presented his first Rhythmistic exhibition. It was called, "Presenting My Rhythm". During the summer of 1978 thousands of tourists and Parisiens visited this showcase.
During this period of Onil's career, he was often criticized and marginalized in "The Black Art Movement" and even called a "sell-ou't for doing commercial illustrations and wanting to establish a genre that went beyond the limited orthodoxy of the term, "Black Art".
Thursday, January 13, 2022
Onli is a rare visual artist who has been innovative and practicing across the divide of two centuries.
Onli is looking at that first publication as source material to produce a totally new body of Rhythmistic Fine Art based on the original designs and unpublished concepts related to this landmark character and book. These will be oil and acrylic paintings completed on archival wood panels. linen and canvases.
Wednesday, January 5, 2022
"Dear fans, scholars, collectors, students, gallerists, composers, musicians, artists, writers, illustrators, animators, investor, critics, curators and more. It's the first week of 2022 and I want to seriously thank all of you for the fantastic year we and ONLI STUDIOS LLC along with all things Rhythmistic experienced. First, we rebranded & rebooted our decades long, original open-sourced welcoming Black Age of Comics, Convention, Chicago into the virtual "BLACK SANKOFA".
We were featured in the historic book/anthology called "It's Life As I See It!". This book showcased the critical inspiring works of several highly valued Chicago Black Cartoonists. The entire first edition of our Rhythmistic character "NOG: The Nubian of Greatness. Protector of the Pyramides' appears in this uniquely intelligent book.
Followed by NOG, circa 1980, being featured along with innovative issues of the 1980s classic 'zine, "Future-Funk" in the blockbuster, group exhibition at the Musuem of Contemporary Art, Chicago, "Chicago Comics: 1960 until Now!".
This awesome ever-cool book and exhibition were the amazing industrious inspired work of curator / writer, Dan Nadel.
Plus, the solo retrospective styled exhibition, "RHYTHMISM: Art as Social Change Making" ran for several months at the stately Gordon Parks Arts Hall in the Corvus Gallery on the campus of the prestigious University of Chicago. Lastly ONLI STUDIOS LLC published its first hyper-dynamic Graphic Novel, "Drawn For The Rhythmic Zone".
In appreciation as gratitude because none fo this happens without your positive participation, sharing and sharing of all things Rhythmistic.
Now we are planning for "BLACK SANKIFA 2.0" and more in the coming year. "
Be well and Stay Smart!
Soild!
Prof. Turtel Onli, M.A.A.T.
Monday, January 3, 2022
This is the second year of this virtual event that is the rebranded original Black Age of Comics Convention. First given and shared to the world in a true open-source offering by ONLI STUDIOS LLC in 1993.
"BLACK SANKOFA 2.0" is produced in partnership with Punx of Rage & ONLI STUDIOS LLC. Hope you can make it. More details are coming.
It will be hosted on the info-site: www.blackageofcomics.com
A lot has happened since 1993 and a lot more is coming!
Prof. Onli drew this 3ft X 6ft Rhythmistic, grease-pencil on brown kraft paper, treatment in 1975. It was part of a total body of oversized drawings that he would offer in exhibitions in non-profit locations such as the South Side Community Art Center or the Afam Art Gallery in Chicago. Onli was never accepted or handled by commercially established art galleries or art dealers.
This drawing and this entire collection was "lost" in Paris during an unfortunate stressful exchange there while Onli was doing his Rhythmistic Future-Primitif thing there in the late 1970s. That was a crushing blow to Onli at that time when he was taking on the international Fine Art and Illustration worlds with his powerfully intelligent Rhythmistic ideas and practices.
The negative resistance was unrelenting.
It was rough in those circles for a gifted openly heterosexual Black male visual innovator.
Yet Onli succeeded.
"Rhythmism Lives!"