Vashti DuBois

Location
Germantown, Michael Clemmons

For Vashti, the purpose of artmaking is to create experiences that nurture, challenge, and move the artist and community. The art and social change aspects of her work are inextricably bound up in each other, a consequence of her growing up female, Black, poor, and a single mom who just wanted to be an artist. When working with young women, ages 13-17, at The Girls' Center, a project of Congreso de Latinos Unidos, Vashti and the staff came together to transform the center, but more importantly to transform the messages that people were getting about the girls through three multimedia, multidisciplinary projects. Alice, Alicia and Ayana in Wonderland was one of the resulting projects, a one-act play about a trip down the rabbit hole of the juvenile justice system developed from interviews, student writings, and daily interactions with the young women. Her directing work includes Converse Sneakers, a one-act play, a coming of age story of two Latina girls growing up in the Bronx. More recently in 2005, after her 16-year-old nephew was murdered in Lynchburg, Virginia, Vashti created a new writing series called Hansel and Gretel, a how-to memoir that dealt with the loss of her nephew and became an instructional guide for survival for her teenage children and family. Vashti sees her art as a continuum, with each project related to and building upon the project before.

Awarded Grants

2016
Art and Change Grant (ACG)

Vashti DuBois
Discipline(s)
Multidisciplinary
Social Change Intents
Cultural Preservation
Feminism

Vashti will produce a catalogue and documentary about The Colored Girls Museum, a space she created in her home that honors the stories and experiences of women and girls of color. The rooms in her house have been converted into installations where artists from the community tell different stories about the ordinary and extraordinary women of color in their lives. The museum is a staging ground for community engagement, education, celebration, and the advancement of civic and cultural pride. Vashti wants to preserve the museum and it’s impact through the catalogue and documentary.  

Michael Clemmons

2012
Art and Change Grant (ACG)

$2,500
Discipline(s)
Multidisciplinary
Social Change Intents
Displacement / Migration / Immigration
Economic Justice

Vashti will create Eviction Proof, a multi-disciplinary, arts-based, community engagement project. She will use art as a medium to illustrate the impact of eviction on families and communities in Philadelphia. This interactive performance art/installation/theatre piece turns the concept of “typical” show home on its head. Eviction Proof plays with the concept of staging the “evicted” instead of the home. 

Albert E. Stewart

2006
Leeway Transformation Award (LTA)

$15,000
Discipline(s)
Literary Arts
Performance
Social Change Intents
Feminism

For Vashti, the purpose of artmaking is to create experiences that nurture, challenge, and move the artist and community. The art and social change aspects of her work are inextricably bound up in each other, a consequence of her growing up female, Black, poor, and a single mom who just wanted to be an artist. When working with young women, ages 13-17, at The Girls' Center, a project of Congreso de Latinos Unidos, Vashti and the staff came together to transform the center, but more importantly to transform the messages that people were getting about the girls through three multimedia, multidisciplinary projects. Alice, Alicia and Ayana in Wonderland was one of the resulting projects, a one-act play about a trip down the rabbit hole of the juvenile justice system developed from interviews, student writings, and daily interactions with the young women. Her directing work includes Converse Sneakers, a one-act play, a coming of age story of two Latina girls growing up in the Bronx. More recently in 2005, after her 16-year-old nephew was murdered in Lynchburg, Virginia, Vashti created a new writing series called Hansel and Gretel, a how-to memoir that dealt with the loss of her nephew and became an instructional guide for survival for her teenage children and family. Vashti sees her art as a continuum, with each project related to and building upon the project before.

Related News

The exhibition is the 2nd iteration of an installation created by The Colored Girls Museum for Leeway’s Making Space: Leeway@25.
Vashti DuBois (ACG '16, '12, LTA '06) and her prolific home museum are featured in the popular Black women's magazine's tour of the City of Sisterly...
Karl Surkan (ACG '07) profiles the recent guided tour at The Colored Girls Museum, Urgent Care: A Social Care Experience, for ThINKingDANCE. Featuring...
Barbara Bullock (Bessie Berman Award ‘02), Betty Leacraft (ACG '14, '09, LTA '11, WOO '99) and Toni Kersey (ACG ‘07) contributed work to The Colored...
The Colored Girl Museum’s A Good Night’s Sleep was reviewed by Phindie.
Faith Bartley, Vashti Dubois, Yolanda Wisher are featured in WHYY’s review and archival audio of Every Zip Philadelphia’s Storytelling Block Party at...
Vashti Dubois’ Colored Girls Museum is hosting A Good Nights Sleep as part of Fringe Festival. The show runs from September 9 to 18.
Vashti Dubois hosts the first annual Colored Girls Museum Festival at FringeArts on July 9.
Today, the Leeway Foundation announced $66,985 in grants to 31 women and trans* artists and cultural producers in Greater Philadelphia, supporting...
Vashti Dubois is making history with her Colored Girls Museum located in Germantown.
Vashti DuBois is looking to build community and pride in underserved neighborhoods, starting with her own.
Vashti Dubois (ACG '12, LTA '06) debuts her new work, The Colored Girls Museum at the Fringe Festival on September 11 through 13.
The Leeway Foundation announces today $49,010 in grants to 22 women and transgender artists living in the six-county Philadelphia area (including...
The Leeway Foundation's 2006 grantmaking year ended with the October cycle of the Art and Change Grant and Stage 2 of the Transformation Award with...
Including these final grants of $208,616, Leeway has awarded a total of $280,363 to 55 women artists in the five-county Philadelphia region during our...
From a documentary about the Hayti community in Coatesville to a book project sharing stories from the Chinese Revolution to a media arts workshop...
Women artists in the Philadelphia area are creating change in their own lives and the lives of others, from Carmen Rojas, a grandmother living in...
From multimedia dance about living in a West Philadelphia neighborhood to storytelling by and about Deaf people, women artists are creating change in...