The Community Partners in Action Prison Arts Program opened its annual show Thursday, Sept. 26, in the Hans Weiss Newspace Gallery. The exhibit, displaying works by current and previous Connecticut inmates, features a variety of mediums and celebrates the creativity of incarcerated people using art to express themselves and connect with their communities beyond the prison walls.
The show, now in its 44th year, hosts 619 pieces created by 159 prisoners from nine different Connecticut prisons.
Program Manager Jeffrey Greene offered perspective on the featured artists.
“Right now, we’re here,” said Greene. “Obviously this is so incredible and so beautiful and so fun to be here, and we have food to eat and we’re all around each other. But right at this moment everyone that’s participating in this show … all know that right now is the opening reception of their exhibition that they cannot come to.”
Greene is an ardent advocate for the importance of art as a means of self-expression for incarcerated people and contends: “Art cannot be contained by a cell.”
“I have a great admiration for the work people do and the diversity of work that’s possible,” Greene said. “The first thing I learned right away seeing artists in prison was they were making art because they couldn’t help but make art. Because of who they were, where they were, and the needs they had. They need to express that they love people, that they need to be loved.”
On poignant example is a wooden, toddler-sized Adirondack chair created by Joshua Gray of the Cheshire Correctional Institution. In his artist statement, Gray writes that though he cannot be with the grandchild he made it for, thanks to the Prison Arts Program he can share “a chair made with love.”
Friends and families of the artists came to the opening to show their support and embrace a sense of connection to their loved ones who could not be there. Alumni of the program were also in attendance, some of whom gave personal testimonies about their experiences.
“My favorite thing to say about the Prison Arts Program is that it saved my life,” said Danny Killion who joined the program while serving time for a string of bank robberies. “When I first entered into the Connecticut prison system, I was suicidal … Then I met Jeff Greene in the Cheshire Correctional maximum-security facility… For me and probably every other artist you see here it gives you a real sense of purpose. It gives you the ability through this program to be connected to your community in a way that is unusual for prisons. Very often people who are incarcerated are kind of forgotten about by society or thought ill about… I’m eternally grateful to the Connecticut Prison Art Program and to the CPA because they saved my life.”
Vinny Nardone, another alum, has been affiliated with the program since 1989. He has now been out of prison for nine years and works driving tractor trailers.
“It created a bubble around me, so I wasn’t bitter, plain and
simple… There was nothing else but my art,” Nardone said. “It gives these girls and guys a little self-esteem. They’re in a world where there is no escape and to say hey, I just had a piece shown at an art show in Manchester, that will be a conversation for quite a while, and it’s all brought about because of the CPA.”
The materials used by the artists range from the traditional like wood, ink and watercolors to the more creative. Ian Cooke created a guitar made of cardboard scavenged from legal pads and wheat paste glue. He gave his creation to his mother outside of the prison, Linda Cusano, who finished it off by painting images on the guitar face.
And Darryl Crenshaw created elaborate origami boxes that spin out of shampoo bottle tops, headphone wire, t-shirt thread and a glue made from toothpaste and creamer.
“Origami is the only thing that consistently brings peace of mind while in my cell,” Crenshaw writes in his artist statement accompanying his three boxes on display.
The CPA’s Prison Arts Program’s impact is far reaching, and it is beginning to attract attention beyond the state. At the show opening, Executive Director Beth Hines announced that the program was just awarded a grant by the National Endowment for the Arts’ ArtsHERE program, which supports historically underserved communities. Out of 4,000 applicants, they were one of only 112 chosen for the honor.
“This will put this program in the national spotlight,” Hines said. “This is incredible work by people who are in incredible situations and trauma they have experienced, and yet look at what they are able to produce … It’s just staggering.”
The Prison Arts Program Annual Show exhibit runs through Nov. 13 in the Hans Weiss Newspace Gallery. Greene will give a presentation about the program Oct. 22 at 1 p.m. in the SBM Charitable Foundation Auditorium, which is free and open to the public. The exhibit’s closing reception will be held Saturday, Nov. 9 from noon to 2 p.m. For more information about the gallery visit https://www.manchestercc.edu/hans-weiss-newspace/.
For more of ICE Media’s coverage of the Prison Arts Exhibit visit https://icemediamcc.org/1734/on-campus-event/art-from-prison-…amily-connection/.