Like many individuals who develop up in Brooklyn, Adama Delphine Fawundu remembers spending a lot of her childhood and adolescence in Prospect Park. Yet she by no means recalled studying in regards to the tales behind the 526-acre inexperienced house’s constructions and websites, such because the 18th-century farmhouse that after belonged to the household of Continental Army Lieutenant Pieter Lefferts, located close to the park’s jap entrance on the nook of Flatbush and Ocean Avenues. As with many of the historic constructions scattered throughout her neighborhood, Fawundu by no means actually thought a lot in regards to the Lefferts Historic House and its previous till she grew older and gained a better understanding of New York’s legacy of slavery.
“I kind of thought, ‘Okay, this is it,’” Fawundu instructed Hyperallergic. “‘Something had to happen in this house, right?’”
Now, over 150 years because the finish of slavery within the United States, this historical past is entrance and middle in Fawundu’s new site-specific set up “Ancestral Whispers,” which she created because the Prospect Park Alliance’s inaugural ReImagine Lefferts artist-in-residence.
In 2020, the artist realized her instincts in regards to the Lefferts Historic House had been right whereas combing via data saved by the Brooklyn Historical Society for a analysis venture. That’s the place she got here throughout Anna and Isaac — two individuals who had been as soon as enslaved by the Lefferts household. In the years since this discovery, the ReImagine Lefferts initiative, which goals to contextualize the home with regard to its position in enslavement and Indigenous land dispossession, has recognized the names of at the least 25 individuals who had been enslaved on the home between its building in 1783 and the abolition of slavery in New York in 1827.
On view till December 1, “Ancestral Whispers” options 31 kaleidoscopic banners impressed by and named after these 25 people. Hanging from the home’s porch dealing with Flatbush Avenue, the translucent banners layer numerous components together with West African cultural symbols, scans of delivery data and gross sales receipts, and bodily varieties created from images of Fawundu, her son, and her grandmother.
Coinciding with the outside banner set up, Fawundu’s video efficiency work “In the Face of History Freedom Cape” (2020) is on view inside the home. The work facilities the voices of Black ladies and nonbinary people reflecting on the difficulty of voting within the wake of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. Filmed in Prospect Park and across the Lefferts House, the piece concerned Fawundu’s “Freedom Cape” (2020), additionally on show, that includes the silhouettes of Black ladies transposed onto historic paperwork reminiscent of newspapers and voting flyers.
In one other room, a meditative, shrine-like set up titled “Ancestral Hymns…an Ensemble #1 – 12” (2024) presents 12 smaller collage banners that includes components like hair and flax organized round a circle of candles.
ReImagine Lefferts Public Programs Manager Riah Kinsey, who grew up in Queens and now works full-time on the home alongside Project Manager Dylan Yeats, defined that one of the primary issues he wished to do when he visited the home was set up altars — very similar to Fawundu’s instincts when she later came over the house. Now, the rooms within the Lefferts House are adorned with clusters of candles and bits of dried grass and flowers. “That’s something that she wasn’t planning,” Kinsey defined. “She said that when she just started setting up in the space, it was just what she felt called to do.”
In addition to contending with ReImagine Lefferts’s historical past of enslavement, the initiative is reckoning with the location’s land dispossession throughout the Dutch colonization of Manhattan and the Hudson area. Project coordinators are at the moment working with the Eenda-Lunaapeewahkiing Collective, a bunch of 4 Lenape tribal governments, to include totally different installations and programming specializing in Lenape cultural heritage. They hope to finally have extra communities be a part of the venture to share their voices and histories via a panel set up in entrance of the home, in addition to one other work honoring the Lenape creation story.
“Our vision is to unite and hear the voices of Lenape across Turtle Island,” Brent Stonefish, an educator and culture-bearer from Eelūnaapèewi Lahkèewiit, instructed Hyperallergic, including that whereas the Lenape could not be in Brooklyn attributable to compelled removing and land dispossession, they’re nonetheless right here, scattered throughout Turtle Island in locations like Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Wisconsin, Ontario, and New Jersey.
Local organizations, such because the Weeksville Heritage Center and the Flatbush African Burial Ground Coalition, are additionally serving to to rework the house into one that may be utilized by local people teams.
“The building always looked spooky and haunted to me and it wasn’t inviting,” Shanna Sabio, a co-trustee of the Flatbush African Burial Ground Coalition and founder of the native group DevelopHouse, instructed Hyperallergic. Growing up in Brooklyn, Sabio remembered taking a faculty journey to the home and feeling very disconnected from its historical past. But she stated that the brand new effort to “reimagine” the location has shone a light-weight on historic points which might be nonetheless related immediately.
“Today’s gentrification and displacement are built on the blueprint of the original displacement of Lenape people from their homeland,” Sabio stated. “Art and narrative storytelling make these truths easier to consume, allowing beauty to soften the landing of these truths and inspire change.”