Janice Frame's work is currently on display at the Eisenhauer Gallery in Edgartown.
Jeanna Shepard

Restoring Human Dignity, One Portrait at a Time

At a time when most people are encountering each other with half their facial features masked, the latest portraits in Janice Frame’s Red Dancers series are exceptionally appealing.

At a time when most people are encountering each other with half their facial features masked, the latest portraits in Janice Frame’s Red Dancers series are exceptionally appealing—and not only because we can see their whole faces.

Now on display at the Eisenhauer Gallery in Edgartown, Ms. Frame’s African tribal members invite viewers to lock eyes with them in a dialogue deeper than words. Each is an individual and highly personal experience, from the dreadlocked figure in the work titled Strength & Power to the butterfly-crowned woman in Free Your Mind.

“My soul reaches to Africa,” said Ms. Frame, a longtime Martha’s Vineyard artist and educator who retired in 2013 after 30 years teaching in Island schools.

“This is who we really are,” continued Ms. Frame, who said she envisions the portraits before she begins to create them. “I see them. They’re friends.”

To build her idealized portraits, Ms. Frame uses handmade paper, metallic paint, stickers and other mixed media such as cowrie shells, which are traditional talismans in parts of Africa. A coat of resin gives the images a gleaming, glass-like sheen.

"My soul reaches to Africa," Ms. Frame says.
Jeanna Shepard
"My soul reaches to Africa," Ms. Frame says.
Jeanna Shepard

Ms. Frame’s dark-skinned people wear face paint, jewelry and ceremonial garments. Their hair, short or flowing, is adorned with flowers, plants, metals and gems, and the expressions on their faces range from quiet contemplation to the brink of joy.

“Every single thing that I do comes back to restoring the dignity, the love of self and the body adornment that African people have,” said Ms. Frame, who was raised in a prosperous South Carolina family that included a dentist, a minister, a pharmacist and three generations—including her own—of teachers.

“They grew up so dignified and so self-affirming,” she said. “I never knew anything about poverty. My grandmother played marbles on Persian rugs. They had a driver.”

The subjects of Ms. Frame’s work are also self-sufficient, but in a different way.

“Tribal people are not after money,” she said. “They live every day and every day counts for them, and to me that’s the essence of life.”

Ms. Frame looks to Africa as a symbol of hope and promise for Black people, she said. “We have to go back to move forward.”

And although she has never been there herself, Ms. Frame takes immense pride in her African heritage and celebrates it in both her work and her life.

The artist taught school on the Island for 30 years.
Jeanna Shepard
The artist taught school on the Island for 30 years.
Jeanna Shepard

“I love my Blackness. I really do,” she said.

An earlier series of Red Dancers in the form of African-inspired dolls, exhibited at Cousen Rose Gallery in Oak Bluffs, was collected by purchasers including Bill and Hillary Clinton, who bought two, Ms. Frame said.

She no longer makes the doll sculptures, she added.

“The dolls left me,” she said. “They came out from me, and then they went.”

Those wishing to see Ms. Frame’s latest Red Dancers should not postpone a visit to the gallery, which sold one of her portraits within days of hanging it. As of Wednesday, about a half-dozen remained.

Eisenhauer Gallery is open daily on North Water street in Edgartown. Ms. Frame’s portraits are also posted online at eisenhauergallery.com.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 08/08/2020 - 10:37

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Lori Darden Atlanta

So proud of my sister! The artistic bloodline goes way back in our family!! She brings it out!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 08/08/2020 - 11:38

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Carolyn Coverdale Oak Bluffs

Very enlightening to see how another chapter of artistic work unfolds from a wealth of creativity within. Beautiful indeed my friend.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 08/08/2020 - 19:58

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Saundra DeGeneste Durham, NC

Janice I'm so proud of you. You're ability to maintain your creativity after all these years is amazing. I've never been consistent with my creativity. I need to learn from you! I remember the time I came to visit you and Leo and we made paper. I'm the proud owner of four of your original Red Warrior sculptures. You have inspired me to get in touch with my own creativity again. Thank you!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 08/09/2020 - 12:41

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Darryl Alexander Takoma Park Maryland

Stunning and inspiring art. Delighted to see it on display. Hope for more real life opportunities to view soon.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 08/16/2020 - 07:34

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Linda Hughes Philadelphia/West Tisbury

Janice your work is an inspiration as was your teaching. So happy to see you.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/18/2020 - 21:01

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Jean Hay Vineyard Haven

Janice I am so excited to becoming acquainted with one of your fine portraits “Strength & Power”. So glad the Vineyard Gazette wrote an article about your fine show. It is so meaningful . Thank you

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/19/2020 - 20:31

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Brenda J Watson Oak Bluffs, MA

Beautiful work focused on African tribal members. A wonderful addition to the Eisenhauet Gallery!

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