Organization of Black American Culture


The Organization of Black American Culture was conceived during the era of the Civil Rights Movement by Hoyt W. Fuller as a collective of African-American writers, artists, historians, educators, intellectuals, community activists, and others. The group was originally known as Committee for the Arts which formed in February 1967 on the Southside Chicago. By May 1967 the group became OBAC and included Black intellectuals Hoyt W. Fuller, the poet Conrad Kent Rivers, and Gerald McWorter, OBAC aimed to coordinate artistic support in the struggle for freedom, justice and equality of opportunity for African Americans. The organization had workshops for visual arts, drama, and writing, and produced two publications: a newsletter, Cumbaya, and the magazine Nommo.

Background

As noted in Jonathan Fenderson's book Building the Black Arts Movement: Hoyt Fuller and the Cultural Politics, it was in the winter of 1966, when Hoyt W. Fuller, Gerald McWorter, and Conrad Kent Rivers began meeting and "reading books, debating concepts, exchanging ideas" at Fullers Lake Meadow apartment at 3001 South Parkway Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. From these meeting the members formed Committee for the Arts. As recalled by Ann Smith, who would become director of OBAC Drama Workshop, it wasn't until a meeting in her and Duke McNeil's apartment in the fall of 1967 that Jeff Donaldson suggested to the group change its name to Organization of Black American Culture. According to Fuller, OBAC, pronounced o-ba-see was meant to "echo the yoruba word oba, denoting loyalty and leadership." Some of their initial public gathering were hosted by Margaret Burroughs at the South Side Community Art Center.

OBAC members and governance

Members and governance of OBA-C during its inauguration were: Gerald McWorter, chairman; Hoyt W. Fuller, vice chairman; Joseph R. Simpson, secretary, Ernest McNeil, treasurer; Jeff R. Donaldson; George R. Ricks; Donald H. Smith; Ronald C. Dunham; Bennett J. Johnson and Conrad Kent Rivers. All of which were part of the Executive Council.

Founding purpose and mission

As reflected in OBA-C's organizations documents were as follows:

Writers Workshop

Among those associated at various times with the OBAC Writers Workshop are founding member Don L. Lee, Carolyn Rodgers, Angela Jackson, Sterling Plumpp, Sam Greenlee, Nikki Giovanni, Sonia Sanchez, Johari Amini, D. L. Crockett-Smith, Cecil Brown, Sandra Jackson-Opoku, and other writers of national stature.

Drama Workshop

, then Anne McNeil, wife of OBAC treasurer Ernest Duke McNeil, founded OBAC's drama workshop with the support of actors Bill Eaves, Len Jones, Harold Lee, Clarence Taylor. OBAC Drama Workshop eventually led to the first black theater in Chicago, Kuumba Theater.

Visual Arts Workshop

In 1967, members of the OBAC's visual arts workshop produced Wall of Respect, a mural dedicated to African-American heroes such as Muhammad Ali, W. E. B. Du Bois, and Malcolm X. The artists involved in the mural project included William Walker, Wadsworth Jarrell and Jeff Donaldson, who has written of the collective's determination to produce a "collaborative work as a contribution to the community". Donaldson went on to found the Coalition of Black Revolutionary Artists, later renamed the African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists in support of Pan-Africanism.

Participating Artists

As noted in the Negro Digest, a key question posed to all its workshop artists was the following: "Do you consider yourself a Black Artists, or an American Artists that happens to be black?"

Actors and directors

After the visual arts and the drama workshops closed, OBAC became solely a writers' workshop within a couple of years, and continued in that form until 1992, surviving longer than any other literary group of the Black Arts Movement that flourished in the 1960s and 1970s. As S. Brandi Barnes, former treasurer and subsequently director of OBAC-Writers Workshop, wrote in 2010: