
Editor’s Note: BlacArted is a front-row view into the maze-like mind of a multi-hyphenated artist pondering on art and the nature of reality as it intersects the creative and the imagined.
On a balmy Friday afternoon in early May, I drove up into the Oakland Hills. I took the trip to sit on a panel with Spencer Wilkerson and Lailan Huen at College Preparatory School. The panel followed a screening of Alice Street, a film produced by Spencer in which Lailan and I make appearances. Alice Street is a documentary about the Malonga Center in Oakland and a fight to save a mural.
The artists and historians who speak in the film are emblematic of the myriad ways in which Oakland artists have proclaimed their need for space to make culture. The documentary encapsulates an important moment in the history of the ongoing struggle for a place for culturemakers in Oakland.
The story of art and artists being displaced in Oakland is not new. Gentrification has exacerbated the problem. The struggle for space has intensified, and many artists and art practices have been permanently displaced from Oakland since the film was made.
As the founder of the Black Arts Movement Business District Community Development Corporation, I question how much square footage the city is willing to preserve for making art and culture in its only declared by-resolution cultural district. As a practicing artist and founder of the oldest North American African theater company in Oakland, pursuing sustainable space to manifest culture-making has been a somber note and a constant scramble in decades of art-making here.
June found me in the Oakland Museum of California attending a meeting about the Community Benefits Agreement (CBA) tied to the redevelopment of the historic sites of the Kaiser Auditorium and the Calvin Simmons Theater. BAMBD CDC undertook the CBA on behalf of the Community Coalition for Equitable Development to ensure the community would have affordable space for making art and the business of making art. This conversation was also emblematic of the spaces where artists try to ensure places to make art in Oakland accessible and affordable. In this case, this effort has persisted since 2019, and there are grave concerns about the animation of the hard-won agreement to allow community access.
I have spent as much time fighting for space and resources to make culture as I have in making art for the last ten years in Oakland.
Ayodele Nzinga, poet laureate of Oakland and founder of the Black Arts Movement Business District Community Development Corporation
I have spent as much time fighting for space and resources to make culture as I have in making art for the last ten years in Oakland. Gentrification, rapid market-rate development, COVID, and inflation-fueled displacement have taken a toll on Oakland’s arts ecosystem. In this decade of trying to stay in place in Oakland, the consistent thing is that artists are on the frontline looking to be the solution. I founded BAMBD CDC in 2016 to push back against being artistically displaced by being a part of the animation of the city’s only declared arts district, the Black Arts Movement Business District. The work of BAMBD CDC has been about space, place, and belonging.
In 2013, The Lower Bottom Playaz residence in West Oakland went dark after 13 years, and the theater company became homeless for the second time in its existence. Meanwhile, the space at 1540 Broadway stood empty for decades until artists reclaimed it; it had been an abandoned warehouse space for 30 years. Ragged Wing, a theater company, raised hundreds of thousands to create the only black box theater in Oakland. Lower Bottom Playaz, Inc. was one of the inaugural residents of the space in 2014. The building changed hands in 2019. The theater company remained in residence in what then became Piano Fight. Piano Fight went dark on March 18th, 2023, leaving Oakland’s oldest Black theater company scrambling for space for its 24th season and the city’s only black box in peril of going dark forever.
After months of negotiation, I’m happy to say that BAMBD, CDC has signed the lease for a three-year prototype that provides brick-and-mortar headquarters for BAMBD, CDC and a secure residence for Lower Bottom Playaz, Inc.
Art making is a discipline it requires a space in which to happen. There must be a gathering space to enact rituals, create new rituals, and preserve, study, and honor what came before. These things require physical space access and control to be truly embodied, sustained and to function as a continuum. To imagine the absurdity of artists in Oakland functioning without a physical space for practice is the same as imagining gardens that grow without seeds and dirt. Without places in which to practice, Oakland artists will continue to be displaced.

To imagine the absurdity of artists in Oakland functioning without a physical space for practice is the same as imagining gardens that grow without seeds and dirt. Without places in which to practice, Oakland artists will continue to be displaced.
– Ayodele Nzinga
Place and space are the recurring motifs in the careers of most Oakland artists. Artists are familiar with crafting counter-narratives, and I have come to appreciate the need to disrupt narratives supporting predictive failure. The arts in Oakland are funded in real dollars at a threshold beneath 1970 funding. There must be a way to resolve the cognitive dissonance created by the vocalized support of the arts in Oakland and the reality of the continued disinvestment in the arts.
Artists in Oakland find ways to create with a lack of resources and space in which to make art. They continue to find ways to engage audiences, serve communities, and act as a barometer for civilization’s evolution. Art and culture get made here not because it’s easy, but because artists persist and create a way when none seems evident.
Ayodele Nzinga is an arts and culture theoretician/practitioner working at the intersections of cultural production, community development, and community well being to foster transformation in marginalized communities. Nzinga holds a Masters in Fine Arts in Writing and Consciousness and Doctorate of Philosophy in Transformative Education & Change; she resides in Oakland, CA. Described as a renaissance woman, Ayodele is a producing director, playwright, poet, dramaturg, actress, performance consultant, arts educator, community advocate, and a culture bearing anchor. Ayodele is the first poet laureate of Oakland.
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