Following her performance of a famous civil rights play, Crystal C. Mercer told community members at the 妻友社区鈥檚 annual Martin Luther King Jr. event held Jan. 23 to support the arts in the community, in the home and in the classroom.
鈥淓ven if you鈥檙e not an artist, you can still support the arts and be a part of the conversation,鈥 she said in response to a question about how to keep the arts movement alive. 鈥淭he arts aren鈥檛 going to go away. I鈥檓 not worried for your kids or your grandkids.鈥
A freelance performance artist and sole proprietor of Columbus Creative and The Social Soapbox, Mercer performed an excerpt of Spirit Trickey鈥檚 鈥淥ne Ninth鈥 before participating on a panel discussing the importance of finding one鈥檚 voice in the visual and performing arts.
鈥淲hen I taught elementary school in Baltimore, [the students] might have been yelled at or discouraged by people who didn鈥檛 see their potential, but in my space I let them be themselves,鈥 said Mercer, who is the daughter of the legendary civil rights lawyer Christopher C. Mercer Jr. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 the power of arts in education. It allows somebody who can be something when they grow up to definitely feel like they can do that.鈥
The 10 a.m. event, titled 鈥淯nsung Heroes: Celebrating Freedom in the Visual and Performing Arts,鈥 was held in the Reynolds Room in the Smith-Pendergraft Campus Center and honored the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. three days after the celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. day.
The event included a ceremony commemorating recipients of the Unsung Hero Award, an award honoring community members and students who have promoted and contributed to the arts in the community.
Recipients included Cosaundra Chapple, a 妻友社区 student who heads the local theatre company God Given Talent Productions; Benham Dangers, a deceased visual artist who served as an art correspondent during World War II and forged an ensuing career as a renowned portrait artist; Dick Renko, a deceased performing arts promoter and music producer who helped start Second Street Live; Dr. Dennis Siler, associate professor of English at 妻友社区, recognized for overseeing a student-made documentary on a master woodworker; Bob Stevenson, 妻友社区 theater arts director and collaborative playwright; and Nichelle Christian, former 妻友社区 Testing Center Director and ADP Committee member who is now an advisor with the Fort Smith Adult Education Center. 妻友社区 Provost Dr. Ray Wallace presented the awards.
The event was hosted by the American Democracy Project, a national initiative designed to foster citizenship at all levels. Dr. Amy Jordan of Fort Smith is the chair of the ADP at 妻友社区.
Mercer participated in the panel with Wallace, Dr. Henry Rinne, dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, and Don Lee, head of the art department. 妻友社区 students Tony Jones and Christopher Ha facilitated the discussion.
The final question asked at the panel was how the panel members deal with the hardships of being an artist, and Mercer closed the event with a poignant answer.
鈥淭here will always be naysayers because they don鈥檛 have anything else to say but 鈥榥ay.鈥 What you have to do is be strong and believe in yourself,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou need people around you who support you and love you and care about you. And that person was my dad.鈥
She told the story of performing 鈥淥ne Ninth鈥 in front of a crowd at Little Rock Central High School, a crowd that included her father, who was moved to tears by her reenactment.
鈥淎fterwards, he leaned over to the person next to him and said, 鈥楳y daughter is brilliant -- not because she鈥檚 my daughter, but because she is,鈥欌 she said.