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Author Profile
Khalil Jannah

I'm a twenty-two-year-old Black male with nothing to lose. Although some might say this would impede my progress, it has given me the unique liberty to pursue my dreams. In the past, I’ve run from my color being a prefix to my profession. Little did I know, it deepened the product of my labor. 
I was born in and lived in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for about eight years. After our garage door was inscribed with “nigger,” my parents found it best to move to the south side of Atlanta. As a child, Atlanta was a huge culture shock, but attending KIPP South Fulton Academy (Knowledge is Power Program) ensured a promising future. I lived in Atlanta for the past decade but attended George School in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and recently graduated from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. During the pandemic, I spent a year on the couch of a ceramics studio in San Diego while selling my wares in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and most recently, I moved to Detroit with friends from high school. Nomadism feels like home. Here I’ll continue my pursuits in the art industry as I prepare for my internship in Taku, Japan next summer.  
I’m confident I’ll be in museums in due time as I intend to own one in the future.

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Articles

The Clay Hierarchy
By Khalil Jannah
FREE ARTICLE! “Even though we have creative artists, media, and consumer feedback now, as a society, we never backtracked the indoctrination of White supremacy on its people. We just kept moving forward … As a speck of hope, our work aims at decolonizing an art form that should have always remained intimate and unscathed by European inadequacies.”
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Jacqueline Bishop, The Market Woman's Story, 2022
Interview with Jacqueline Bishop
By Khalil Jannah
This month's FREE article. It's a good place for artists to explore – those tender, unsure, and vulnerable places within ourselves. For one thing, it keeps us all humble. One thing I’ve noticed in these explorations [is that] we get universal. I often say to my students, "Your very individual story is what’s going to become your universal story."
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