Skip to content
Center for Art Design and Visual Culture - UMBC
A barefoot woman dressed in white is seated on the ground behind a pillar. She is hugging the pillar, which is located in an outdoor public space.
Levester Williams “dreaming of a beyond: Baltimore (2021-2024)” 4K color video/video installation still

Art Projection: “demos” by Levester Williams

February 29, 2024 6PM–8PM

On select evenings in late February and early March 2024, UMBC visitors received a sneak peek of a new public video art gallery! Center for Art, Design, and Visual Culture (CADVC), the research center and art gallery based at the College of Art, Humanities, and Social Sciences, ran “demos” for a new video art projection gallery in the Fine Arts Building amphitheater. The work featured in these demonstrations was Levester Williams’s “dreaming of a a beyond: Baltimore” (2021-2024).

The demos will be visible between roughly February 27 and March 6, 2024. A public event celebrating the demos will be held on February 29, 2024, 6-8pm. Snacks and refreshments will be served.

The work is the result of the artist’s Exploratory Research Residency at CADVC, ongoing since 2023. During this time, Williams has been researching the histories and mythologies of Cockeysville (Maryland) marble, a material used in many salient objects in the local built environment, including the Washington Monument and iconic exterior steps of Baltimore rowhomes. The film results from this research as well as movement workshops and other activities that included the participation of UMBC students and other Baltimore residents. Artist Nia Hampton, a current IMDA graduate student, and her mother, artist and arts advocate Sheila Gaskins, are featured performers. The filmic work was assisted by IMDA graduate student Bao Nguyen and artist Savannah Knoop, who worked on the project as an intimacy coordinator and facilitator.

“dreaming of a beyond: Baltimore” is an embodied consideration of the labor histories, and mythologies, surrounding a marble building material that appears throughout Baltimore’s built environment. In the movement experiments surrounding the film work, participants negotiated relationships to public space, monumental form, and connections to history. In Williams’s words, the project underscores the “intertwined history of African-Americans’ plight to self-determined agency and full citizenship, and a rather benign stone.”

This public display of an art work-in-process is consistent with CADVC’s commitment to showcasing the experimentation of artists and the visual culture of interdisciplinary research. Currently, CADVC’s gallery is exhibiting “Spectrum of Process,” highlighting UMBC faculty approaches to art and culture through rigorous, experimental processes.

With funds provided by the Maryland State Arts Council’s Public Art Planning Grant, CADVC has been researching this site as a forum for public art presentations and video art projections for over a year. Last spring, CADVC hosted a series of public forums on public art as part of its planning grant activities. Curator and artist Rahne Alexander, an alumna of the IMDA program, served as moderator and convener. CADVC also worked with a number of consultants and specialists in projection mapping, AV technologies, and fine art projection. UMBC colleagues in Event Services, Facilities, IT, Visual Arts, Student Affairs, the office of Research and Creative Achievement and beyond also contributed to these planning activities. The CAHSS Dean’s Office funded this year’s build of the CADVC projection art gallery now underway.

About Levester Williams

Levester Williams (b. 1989) was born in Lansing, Michigan, and raised in Columbia, Tennessee. He received his B.F.A. in art and design from University of Michigan (2013) and his M.F.A. in sculpture and extended media from Virginia Commonwealth University (2016). He recently completed his master’s degree in computer and information technology in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at University of Pennsylvania (2024). Williams currently lives and works in Philadelphia, a city that—like Baltimore— incorporates Cockeysville marble into it its architectural and monumental landscapes.

A man stands on a sunny city street, facing the camera. He wears a black sweater with lavender and orange accents.
Photo by Sizwe Ndlovu

Visitor Information

Our exhibitions and events are free and open to the public for full participation by all individuals regardless of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other protected category under applicable federal law, state law, and the University’s nondiscrimination policy.

If you need specific accommodations at one of our events, whether in person or online, or to experience an exhibition, please contact CADVC at cadvc@umbc.edu or 410-455-3188 as soon as possible.