THE ART OF
STAYING FREE
K
story and photos by Dakota Parks
nown by many as a creative pillar in the Brownsville neighborhood determined to help uplift and empower others through art, Carter J. Gaston first started drawing in the timeout corner as a child. His mother, an avid reader and supporter of his art, kept a notepad and pencil in every room of the house that he would use to practice spelling words and doodling cartoons. Gaston grew up in Atlanta, GA, where his art interests shifted from performing arts, staring in theater performances, a few movies and commercials to drawing on train cars and painting portraits for traveling money to challenging himself to complete a new exhibit or art show once a year. When he moved to Pensacola six years ago, Gaston started making a name for himself and networking by painting and drawing portraits at Pensacola Beach and Gallery Night downtown. Now, his art can be seen throughout the entire city, including dozens of murals, food trucks, children’s book illustrations, art classes and even the new Brownsville community sign on W. and Cervantes Street that he helped design in collaboration with the Renaissance Man. COVID-19 has not slowed down the creative juices flowing out of Gaston’s art studio on V Street. In August, he released his newest untitled collection as the first exhibit on display at the recently opened Gordon Community Art Center located at 306 N DeVilliers Street. The collection features 14 acrylic painted portraits covered in a polyurethane clear gloss. “Community is really important to me,” Gaston said. “You can see black history and culture in a lot of my murals. There is a lot happening in 16 | DOWNTOWNCROWD.COM
Belmont-DeVilliers, and I just wanted to capture the power of that community in my art. Gentrification is a tough topic, but I think we have to be a part of the change. We can’t just watch it happen. We have to use our gifts, skills and voices, which the community needs in order to grow.” As Gaston explained, he was eager to finish the collection for the Gordon and even posted on social media asking which influential figures he should paint next. He received over 200 responses. The subjects of the portraits include both famous influential figures like Malcolm X, Kobe Bryant, Prince, Black Thought, Pop Smoke and Robin Williams, as well as people from the community that have inspired him like Scott Satterwhite, Geraldine Vaurigaud, Teníadé Broughton and his own girlfriend, Cat.
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His painting process starts with his phone in his left hand and a pencil in the right hand. “I roughly sketch out a portrait, then start painting eyes, nose, mouth, chin then hair. I spend a lot of time mixing colors for skin tone and background,” Gaston said. “The paint splatters that overlay this collection were just another way for me to try something new and mix colors.” The overlay paint shapes prison bars across canvases, spells out words like “be kind, be nice” and works to tie color pallets together. Below the pink swirls on the Robin Williams portrait, you can see Gaston’s life motto painted onto his shirt: Stay Free. For Gaston, the motto is a spiritual reminder to stay free from all forms of oppression, suppression and depression.
We have to use our gifts, skills and voices, which the community needs in order to grow.”