The global COVID-19 pandemic has touched every part of our lives. From mask wearing mandates, to the reality of remote work, to second graders in ZOOM meetings ­­— it is official, we are living in a new world. As our communities look to adapt and cope with our new normal, artists and creative voices have become leaders on the path to understanding our role as citizens.

From the earliest cave paintings, to Michelangelo, to Bach, to Martin Scorsese, artists have captured the moments, feelings, and attitudes of their peers and communities in an effort to bring people together. Art never stops storytelling, nor does it ever stop evolving. It is forever connected to a time and place, yet can be appreciated and loved again, generation after generation as new events harken back to our past.

Today, artist Carrie Mae Weems is telling the story of our new reality–a reality that is changing day-to-day, seemingly hour-by-hour. She is considered one of the most influential contemporary American artists working today, with work that focuses on family relationships, cultural identity, sexism, class, political systems, and the consequences of power. Her work on the pandemic is powerful.

“COVID-19 is an ecological health crisis of epic proportions and we’ve all been impacted,” says Weems, an artist and activist. “We have indisputable evidence that people of color have been disproportionately impacted. This fact affords the nation an unprecedented opportunity to address the impact of social and economic inequality in real-time.”

The Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) has partnered with Weems to launch the artist’s new public art initiative, RESIST COVID/TAKE 6!, in Atlanta and Savannah, home to SCAD’s two U.S. campuses. The artist-driven project emphasizes the precaution for people to maintain a six-foot distance from one another, and speaks to the urgency of Weems’ call to action.

“Not only does RESIST COVID/TAKE 6! raise critical health awareness, it shines a light on how this pandemic has disproportionately affected Black, Latino and Native communities,” says President Paula Wallace. “We are pleased to be partnering with Carrie Mae Weems, longtime friend of SCAD, to bring this important work to Atlanta and Savannah.”

At the SCAD Museum of Art in Savannah, the museum’s street-facing jewel boxes display large-scale photographs accompanied by the initiative’s messages including “Don’t Worry, We’ll Hold Hands Again.” RESIST COVID/TAKE 6! is also on view at public locations in and around SCAD Atlanta. Commanding billboards and bus shelters bring its message to the attention of residents in one of the country’s highly impacted cities. Flyers, “church-style” fans, and bags have been distributed through Meals on Wheels Atlanta and organizations in Savannah. The printed pieces direct audiences to local resources including COVID-19 testing sites.

The works showcase the realities of the international health crisis while providing notes of gratitude to workers within the health and service industries and making direct appeals for people to take preventive safety measures.

SCAD has over a decade-long friendship with Weems. The artist has collaborated with the university on numerous exhibitions and initiatives to showcase her dynamic work. Weems has been a distinguished visiting professor at SCAD Atlanta and worked with students on a thought-provoking film, “Constructing History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment” for the National Black Arts Festival in 2008. In 2016, Weems was the SCAD deFINE ART honoree and keynote speaker. That same year she had an accompanying exhibition titled “Carrie Mae Weems: Considered” at SCAD MOA in the Walter O. Evans Center for African American Studies.

Most recently, Weems spoke with President PaulaWallace for the ‘On Creativity‘ podcast where the artist discussed recent and upcoming creative work, the importance of the RESIST COVID/TAKE 6! initiative, and her legacy in the industry.

Weems began working on RESIST COVID/TAKE 6! this spring while artist-in-residence at Syracuse University, as the extent of the COVID-19 crisis became apparent. The idea came from a conversation of Weems and her close friend Pierre Loving, lamenting what they saw unfolding. The initiative is also being activated in cities nationwide including New York, Detroit, Dallas, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Philadelphia in support by producing collaborators, THE OFFICE performing arts + film.

“The arts allow us to get closest to our humanity,” says Weems. “One of the important things is to understand the circumstances under which we live. This means unmasking inequity, because then you begin to see the power structures that are under it to keep you fighting one another as opposed to really looking at really the source of the problems. Denial does not solve a problem.”

Learn more about SCAD here: https://www.southernliving.com/culture/paula-wallace-savannah-college-of-art-and-design