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Arts & Entertainment

This LA artist and criminal justice advocate is building a community center. Here’s how you can help

A Black man with a long white goatee wearing a long navy painter's coat, smiles at the camera with his hands in his front coat pockets. Behind him is a black wall with a white, curio-style portrait of him painted on it, and directly behind him is a cinder block wall with each block painted differently. Above him is a clear blue sky.
Artist Mr. Wash outside his studio in Compton.
(
Joppe Jacob Rog
)

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Before he was released from prison, artist Fulton Leroy Washington (a.k.a. Mr. Wash) made a promise to his fellow inmates.

“I explained to the guys with tears in their eyes, and not just in their eyes, but running down their cheeks, that they were going to return home. And [...] I was leaving to go and prepare a place for them,” he said.

Mr. Wash was convicted of a non-violent drug offense he maintains he didn’t commit and was sentenced to life in prison because of mandatory minimums. He served more than 20 years in federal prison before he was granted clemency and had his sentence commuted by President Barack Obama in 2016.

'Art is like therapy'

While he was incarcerated, Mr. Wash began to draw and paint, and then taught art to others at three different prisons in Kansas, Colorado and finally Lompoc, California, for 18 years.

“I changed the lives of a lot of prisoners.  Each prison I went to, the warden would ask me to do what you did there, here,” he said. “I would continue to teach and share, give guidance and mentorship, and sometimes therapy. ‘Cause art is like therapy. I could use it as a way to reach and find out some of the [...] deepest things going on with them.”

Mr. Wash first began drawing after his lawyer asked him to sketch a person from memory — a witness who she hoped to track down to help with his defense. While it didn’t prevent his conviction, it did help his attorney locate the person, and after that, he said, “I promised God at that time that I would continue to practice [art] and to share it.”

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He gained media attention for his portraits and other paintings he made while incarcerated, and in 2014 completed a work depicting Obama granting him clemency.

A painting of several people around a large conference table, including a Black man with a white goatee in tan prison shirt and pants sitting across from President Obama. A fireplace, portrait of Abraham Lincoln, painting of "The Last Supper" are in the background. Real life political figures like Joe Biden and Eric Holder are among those sitting and standing around the table, by President Obama and at the table with the painted depiction of the artist in prison clothing.
"Emancipation Proclamation," 2014.
(
Courtesy of Mr. Wash
)

“Whether directly or indirectly,” Mr. Wash wrote in his new book Artists in Space, “I also believe that art played a part in President Obama commuting my sentence and bringing me home in 2016.”

Mr. Wash’s paintings have since been featured in the Hammer Museum, LACMA, The Huntington Library and at a solo show at the Jeffrey Deitch Gallery.

Now he’s released Artists in Space to help fund the creation of a community center — including space for art classes and housing for formerly incarcerated people — at the site of his art studio on Rosecrans Avenue in Compton.

‘Artists in Space’

Artists in Space features interviews with 20 Los Angeles artists, photographed in the usually private spaces where they work.

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Some of these artists helped to fund Mr. Wash’s legal defense and many offered their own spaces for him to work in after he was released from prison.

Patrisse Cullors, the artist and co-founder of Black Lives Matter, offered Mr. Wash space to work on a larger scale painting at her Crenshaw Dairy Mart, which in turn helped inspire Mr. Wash’s vision for the Art By Wash Studio & Community Center.

A photograph of an open art book. On the left is a photo of Mr. Wash and Patrisse Cullors standing next to each other in front of the Crenshaw Dairy Mart. On the left is text that's too small to read, broken up by larger text that reads, "It's a place to practice the world that we all deserve to live in."
A portion of "Artists in Space," which features 20 L.A. artists, including Patrisse Cullors, in conversation with Mr. Wash.
(
Joppe Jacob Rog
)

Artists Kenneth Gatewood and Charles Bibbs, who Mr. Wash counts as mentors and who are also featured in the book, helped contribute to his legal defense fund for years.

“And I had never met them,” Mr. Wash said. “They were selling their work and giving 25% of their work to pay the legal fees to try to get me out.”

Making the vision a reality

The Compton location where Mr. Wash works today has already been transformed significantly — from a dilapidated, overgrown lot to one that now includes his studio, office, and a large outdoor area (made over with donated paint and astroturf) with walls that artists and community members are invited to make their mark on.

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Mr. Wash’s vision for the space is for it to be a “two-way bridge” that provides young people with a creative outlet to set their futures on a positive trajectory, and as a place for formerly incarcerated people to live and create art.

An illustration of many differently shaped orange buildings, some more block-like, some more like pyramids, with a busy street and pedestrians in the foreground. Surrounding the buildings are palm trees.
A rendering of the Art By Wash Studio & Community Center.
(
The NOW Institute
)

His hope is that the main building will be completed before the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, but still needs to raise several million dollars to make that a reality.

He’s currently raising money to fund the construction through sales of Artists in Space, donations to the nonprofit Help Us Help Wash, and by selling his own paintings, which he continues to create in his Compton studio, most often working in silence.

“I just pray,” Mr. Wash said. “If you listen to music or TV or radio, to me, while you’re working, part of your energy and spirit is being [put] into that [...] It's captured you. And so I, a lot of times, choose not to be captured again. So I just stay within me and within God and just keep going forward.”

How to attend

An Artists in Space BBQ and launch party, with Mr. Wash and Patrisse Cullors in conversation with Evan Pricco of The Unibrow, is from 2 to 6 p.m. March 7 at the Art By Wash Studio & Community Center, 915 W. Rosecrans Ave., Compton. RSVP here.

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