Courtesy BMA

For all of its present-day economic issues and social challenges to overcome, Baltimore in 2017 faces no shortage of creative voices, particularly in its black communities. Next weekend, the Baltimore Museum of Art is providing a platform for those voices to convene and share their recipes for success.

On Saturday, Feb. 11, the BMA will host โ€œCreativity Exchange: Intersections Between Black Artists and Black-Owned Businesses.โ€ Organizers have centered the five-hour event around a workshop about the connections between branding and storytelling and a panel discussion featuring several of the cityโ€™s most successful black art entrepreneurs. Amid the day of exploration, career advice and networking, Baltimoreโ€™s black artisans will also be selling goods at a craft fair in the museum.

The Joshua Johnson Council and MICAโ€™s Business of Art and Design Master of Professional Studies Program are sponsoring the event.

Myrtis Bedolla, the owner of the nationally acclaimed Galerie Myrtis, is one of four entrepreneurs slated to participate in a panel discussion that day. Bedolla has owned and operated her gallery since 2006. She moved her business from Washington D.C.โ€™s Capitol Hill neighborhood to her present space in Old Goucher in the summer of 2008.

Baltimore has served her well. Over the years, she has provided countless showcases for the cityโ€™s wealth of black talent, including the multi-artist show โ€œTo Be Black In White Americaโ€ from summer 2016 and Stephen Townsโ€™ ongoing Nat Turner-focused time portal of an exhibition, โ€œTake Me Away to the Stars.โ€

โ€œMoving the gallery to Baltimore is one of the best business decisions Iโ€™ve made,โ€ she said. โ€œI was immediately embraced by the art community.โ€

Geographically, Baltimore is an excellent place for a black art entrepreneur to run his or her own business, Bedolla said. โ€œGiven my proximity to MICA, Washington, D.C. and New York, I have access to an extraordinary pool of artistic talent which allows me to be very selective,โ€ she said. โ€œFor artists, it makes for a very competitive field.โ€

Joining her on the panel will be Pierre and Jamyla Bennu, who run the Exittheapple art space and Oyin Handmade in Barclay (and were once dubbed the โ€œCoolest Black Family in Americaโ€ by Ebony magazine) and Jay Jacksonrao, who runs media firm TNP Studios. The quartet will discuss their work, project development strategies, their past struggles and the โ€œchallenges and opportunities unique to black business owners and artists in Baltimore,โ€ according to a release from the BMA. The panel starts at 2 p.m.

Prior to their discussion, the Creativity Exchange will also feature a storytelling- and branding-focused workshop called โ€œFinding Your Niche,โ€ starting at 12:30 p.m. Heather Bradbury, director of MICA Open Studiesโ€™ master of professional studies program, will lead workshop participants in exploring the art of storytelling and how it ties into communicating oneโ€™s brand and connecting with customers. (Hopeful participants can email jbraiterman@artbma.org or call 443-573-1836 to RSVP.)

โ€œCreativity Exchange: Intersections Between Black Artists and Black-Owned Businessesโ€ runs from 12-5 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 11, at 10 Art Museum Drive, on the Johns Hopkins University campus. Click here for more information.

Ethan McLeod is a freelance reporter in Baltimore. He previously worked as an editor for the Baltimore Business Journal and Baltimore Fishbowl. His work has appeared in Bloomberg CityLab, Next City and...