Kirk Washington Jr., killed in a car crash at I-94 and Hwy. 280, used art and words to take on tough issues, his friends said.
Artist Kirk Washington, 41, of Minneapolis, died at the scene of the crash on Interstate 94 near Hwy 280.
As a teenager, Kirk Washington Jr. expressed himself through graffiti.
Later, he turned to the written
word, seeking and often finding a way to bring north Minneapolis and the
rest of his community together to talk about issues sometimes swept
under the rug — racism, housing inequities, police brutality, politics.
He was among the first to say, “Enough with talking. We have to do something,” said friend and fellow artist E.G. Bailey.
“He was a brilliant artist,” Bailey
said of his friend, whom he called Bro Sun. “He was like a bright
light. He filled up a room and was always engaged.”
On Monday evening, Washington’s
voice was silenced when he was killed in a rush-hour car crash on
Interstate 94 near Hwy. 280. He was 41.
Washington was headed toward St.
Paul when a westbound car crossed the median and crashed into his Volvo
station wagon, pushing it into a Metro Transit bus.
The driver of the other car, Nancy
Scott, 52, of Michigan City, Ind., was taken to Hennepin County Medical
Center in Minneapolis, where she was in critical condition Tuesday.
In 2011, a concrete barrier near
the crash site was shortened to improve sightlines for eastbound
traffic, according the Minnesota Department of Transportation. After an
earlier fatal crash there, in March 2015, plans were made to restore a
barrier there by later this year.
When Bailey first saw Facebook posts about Washington’s death, he was in disbelief.
“It was a shock,” he said. “It’s devastating. We’re losing an advocate for the community. A fighter.”
In a Facebook post on Tuesday,
Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges said the city suffered the loss of a
great talent. “My heart is heavy,” she wrote.
Washington was among several poets who wrote a
stanza for the poem “One Minneapolis: A City in Verse” for Hodges’ 2014
inauguration:
language describes the ideas of the ones who speak it
… the single stories about the 5th ward …& the words we see that narrate gentrification, in real time, say a lot
I speak the gospel of the Northside, with the rage of lovers …
… and perceive in my dreams …
a unified breath that electrocutes fear and misunderstanding
… to remain apathetic is assured enslavement so … precisely, what is a dream?
‘Many tears shed’
In a post about his work, Washington said one of his goals as an artist was to foster social change.
“I hope to achieve a
counternarrative to the preexisting single story about African-Americans
with my work,” he said. “I absolutely love stories,” he wrote. “The
story … gives cues to understanding human nature.”
As a teen, Washington took to the
streets to express himself by “spray painting and using markers” around
town, he said. “Of course this wasn’t legal,” he said. “But it gave me
the sense that I could be intentional and express myself
simultaneously.”
He turned to writing at age 17
while recuperating from torn knee ligaments. “It also gave me time to go
inside myself,” he wrote.
At 19, he began reading poetry
around town and took his first art class at a city park. He later joined
a performance-art residency. “It changed my life,” he wrote.
He then spent 5½ years living in the United Kingdom, where he worked as an interdisciplinary artist.
Back in Minneapolis, Washington
joined about a dozen other black male artists in forming a performance
collective called Sirius B. “We were training to be artist activists,”
Bailey said.
The focus was on issues that
affected black men, such as gun violence, body issues, rites of passage.
A year after Minneapolis hit a record 97 homicides and was dubbed
Murderapolis, the group created a performance piece addressing gun
violence.
Washington was never afraid to
address the tough issues, often through art that could be found in the
neighborhoods. “Kirk would push us not to take the easy route,” Bailey
said.
Over the last year, Bailey said,
Washington had been working with another artist to build a gathering
space on the North Side that would be part coffee shop, recording
studio, computer lab and meeting rooms.
As news of his death spread, those who knew him posted comments of grief and loss.
“He captured our struggle with such grace … many tears shed this morning,” wrote artist Camille Gage.