Creator
Lisa Langley aka Lisa Hey Skildum @LHS_Heart
Title
Lion HeART: See Me. Hear Me. Believe Me.
Coverage
2100 East Lake Street, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Description
The face of a lion painted over a wall that had been previously tagged. The lion's mane incorporates some of the tagging. Text on the lion's face reads "SEE ME/HEAR ME/BELIEVE ME"
Source
Located at the Aldi on Lake Street.
From the artist: "Dr. Pamela Ayo Yetunde, Buddhist-Christian activist and pastoral counselor, asked a poignant question at a student gathering at United Seminary a week after George Floyd was murdered. In the 9-minute video, Floyd said over and over again that he couldn't breathe. Yet, the cops chose not to believe him. Dr. Ayo asked United students, "How can we believe what YOU say is true?" She argues that for too long, our nation has dismissed the black voice into a narrative that no longer regards it as credible. We need to retrain ourselves, dismantle the systematic racism, and recognize what we see and hear as truth." Also from the artist: "As I was painting, a number of people asked me, "Why a lion? Why these words on his cheeks?" At a student gathering at United Theological Seminary last week, Dr. Ayo Yetunde asked a poignant question, "How can we believe that whatever you say is true?" She contends that the black narrative in our country has long been deemed incredible and unbelievable. Throughout my teaching career, I've seen my own students raise their voices, declaring their innocence, only to get in even more trouble for being disruptive. By age 11 and 12, many students are used to not being believed. My hope is that the lion, a long standing symbol of power and strength in my own artwork, bring societal credibility to the black voice so that when a man says he can't breathe, he is believed."
See also #1089
As of July 30, 2024, this panel is still preserved on the side of the building.
Please see this StoryMap for more information about the panel.
From the artist: "Dr. Pamela Ayo Yetunde, Buddhist-Christian activist and pastoral counselor, asked a poignant question at a student gathering at United Seminary a week after George Floyd was murdered. In the 9-minute video, Floyd said over and over again that he couldn't breathe. Yet, the cops chose not to believe him. Dr. Ayo asked United students, "How can we believe what YOU say is true?" She argues that for too long, our nation has dismissed the black voice into a narrative that no longer regards it as credible. We need to retrain ourselves, dismantle the systematic racism, and recognize what we see and hear as truth." Also from the artist: "As I was painting, a number of people asked me, "Why a lion? Why these words on his cheeks?" At a student gathering at United Theological Seminary last week, Dr. Ayo Yetunde asked a poignant question, "How can we believe that whatever you say is true?" She contends that the black narrative in our country has long been deemed incredible and unbelievable. Throughout my teaching career, I've seen my own students raise their voices, declaring their innocence, only to get in even more trouble for being disruptive. By age 11 and 12, many students are used to not being believed. My hope is that the lion, a long standing symbol of power and strength in my own artwork, bring societal credibility to the black voice so that when a man says he can't breathe, he is believed."
See also #1089
As of July 30, 2024, this panel is still preserved on the side of the building.
Please see this StoryMap for more information about the panel.
Rights
Creator: Lisa Hey Skildum aka Lisa Lenglet
Images are collected in this archive for educational purposes and are not intended for commercial use. Reproduction rights for all images remain with the creators/photographers when we are able to identify them.
We seek to identify artistic creators when they want to be identified, and we respect their rights to protect their identity should they choose to remain anonymous. Please contact us if you are the creator of work in this archive and you wish to be identified or if you wish for your work to be removed from the archive.
Images are collected in this archive for educational purposes and are not intended for commercial use. Reproduction rights for all images remain with the creators/photographers when we are able to identify them.
We seek to identify artistic creators when they want to be identified, and we respect their rights to protect their identity should they choose to remain anonymous. Please contact us if you are the creator of work in this archive and you wish to be identified or if you wish for your work to be removed from the archive.
Publisher
Urban Art Mapping Project
Date
2020-06-07
Contributor
HS
Identifier
UAM-GF_0153
Spatial Coverage
Minneapolis
Relation
Minnesota
Extent
United States
Original Format
Mural