White artist portrays 'The Talk' black parents have in powerful painting

“How do you explain to a kid that the world isn’t fair? That it isn’t safe?” artist Michael D’Antuono asks, referring to his latest painting, The Talk.

In the painting, no one in the room is smiling. Not Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Not President Obama. Not the mother and father who lean in towards their young black son to have “the talk.” The only ones smiling aren’t in the room; they’re on TV — a once bubbly but now deceased black boy sporting a hoodie and an older white cop, sporting his officer’s uniform and a smug grin. The news title flashing on the TV screen explains the strained mood: “No Indictment in Police Shooting of Unarmed Youth.”

“That’s a hard thing to say,” D’Antuono continues, “so I don’t have them speaking. I have them struggling to find the right words.”

D’Antuono created the piece to coincide with Martin Luther King Day. The Talk explores time — the time it takes for parents to figure out how to talk to their young black boy about how to stay alive, the time it takes for a nation to truly change, and the tenor of the time in which we find ourselves in now. The artist seats the family in between hovering images of MLK Jr., who represents a painful past, and President Barack Obama, who some say represents a “post-racial America,” asking the viewer to consider the quandary of our times:

The Talk illustrates how time — while healing some wounds — has deepened others. Like the rest of D’Antuono’s body of work, it is purposely socio-political. “I try to spark conversation on serious issues and expose hypocrisy and injustice,” he explains. “This piece is more restrained than my other paintings because I wanted to get empathy from white parents, so maybe they could feel a little bit of what black families have to deal with. Everybody can relate to protecting their kids.”

D’Antuono showed no restraint in A Tale of Two Hoodies, created in response to the shooting of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin in 2014. When D’Antuono learned that George Zimmerman (Martin’s killer), was auctioning a painting on Ebay (that ended up selling for $100,000), he posted A Tale of Two Hoodies on the site as well, pledging to give half of the profits to the Trayvon Martin Foundation. D’Antuono says that the picture never sold, however, because Ebay removed it for its use of KKK imagery.

Michael D’Antuono is a part of an unofficial fraternity of white activist artists who, illustrative of King’s words, “have come to realize that their destiny is part of our destiny.”

The Talk answers the question it asks: What is the tenor of our times? It’s a time where some use their power and influence to destroy black lives, while others use theirs to remind us of King’s words in the “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” on April 16,1963:   “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

This MLK Day, artists like D’Antuono and Patrick Campbell champion the type of “creative protest” that King envisioned, “meeting physical force with soul force.” They encourage us to continue to dream that one day, the only “talk” that our children will have to hear is the one that includes trumped up stories about storks delivering babies.

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