Hampton Art Lovers Presents | "Conch House Hues" | featuring Ray Rolston

Hampton Art Lovers Presents | "Conch House Hues" | featuring Ray Rolston

Historic Ward Rooming House latest exhibition, "Conch House Hues" Presented by Hampton Art Lovers, which celebrates the art of Ray Rolston

By Hampton Art Lovers

Location

Historic Ward Rooming House

249 Northwest 9th Street Miami, FL 33136

About this event

Welcome to Hampton Art Lovers Presents: Conch House Hues featuring the Art of Ray Rolston. Get ready to immerse yourself in a world of color and creativity as we showcase the works of the late Ray Rolston (1947 - 2019). Sponsored by MIA Legacy Magazine, Southeast =pOvertown / Park West CRA and ELuggage.com.

Ray Rolston

Ray brings you the tropical warmth and sunshine of the Florida Keys through color and style on canvas and prints. Born in British Guyana, a small country nestled amid the rainforest at the northern tip of South America. Ray is a graduate of Queens College with a Masters Degree in English. A naturalist at heart, and growing up in the tropics with bright sunsets and endless summer weather inspired him at an early age. He started painting the surrounding landscapes of his hometown. The many waterfalls and rivers of the area served as the perfect backdrop for his later works. After migrating to the US and spending 3 decades in New York City & South Florida, he relocated to The Florida Keys. Ray called Key West his home for more than twenty years. The lush tropical landscape, colorful conch houses, landmark buildings and magnificent sunsets became his subjects and inspiration. We call his style of art, Conch House Hues. Hampton Art Lovers curated the show with the specific purpose of showcasing the Conch House as the subject. Ray made portraits of these homes, many of them historic buildings. Just like our own - Historic Ward Rooming House.

Conch House

The conch house architectural style was developed in Key West by Bahamian immigrants, known as "Conchs", a large number of Key West’s early colonial immigrants came from the nearby Bahamas in increasing numbers after 1830, when slavery was abolished there (thirty years before it ended in the U.S.). Over the years, Bahamians of African descent migrated to the Florida Keys and Miami in search of a better life. Major industries on the island included salt production, wreck salvage operations and fishing. In Miami they moved for maritime jobs, farm work, and, later, to build the city’s physical infrastructure. Many Bahamians had experience building boats, and the earliest conch houses were built like boats, using timber framing. In the 1880s timber framing was replaced with balloon framing. Houses in the conch style were also built in Miami, in particular, in the Coconut Grove and Overtown neighborhoods. The Historic Ward Rooming House which was built by a Bahamian architect from Key West in the early 1900s, is an example and monument to this history.Key West Hues (Colors)

Nicknamed the Conch Republic, the history of Key West is as colorful as the guests coming back time and time again to this quirky beach town...Playful seaside hues and fanciful design details enliven the cute cottages found on Florida's Key West island. Key West, or Conch, cottages feature fanciful elements like slim columns topped with decorative wooden details. Tropical and playful hues express a carefree attitude. The lush tropical landscape, colorful conch houses, landmark buildings and magnificent sunsets became the subjects and inspiration for Key West Colors. It is through this lens that Key West's Motto "One Humanity Family" lives.

Organized by

Hampton Art Lovers

We inspire the appreciation of African-American Fine Art. We honor the heart and soul of Fine Artists and make their work accessible to anyone who loves art. Hampton Art Lovers believes that understanding culture through experiencing the arts is becoming increasingly vital in the modern world. We live in an information economy, a world in which technology can provide access to products and services that have been previously inaccessible. Intense, experiential learning is the currency of the knowledge economy and lovers of art do this naturally. Hampton Art Lovers believes that through culture and arts education we can improve our communities and communities all over the world.

Historic Ward Rooming House

The Historic Ward Rooming House is supported by the City of Miami SE Overtown/Park West CRA and operated by Hampton Art Lovers. The Historic Ward Rooming House Gallery has a rich socially significant history. It is an honor to bring this exhibition to this space. Built in the 1900s by an African-American family with Bahamian roots (Shaddrack and Victoria Ward), the Ward Rooming House served as a home for both African American and Native Americans who needed a safe place to sleep at night. In the 1940s and 50s it was known for hosting various civic groups and became the “Club House”. Built in the era of Overtown's historic heyday, when it was known as "Colored Town," the Ward Rooming House stands as a tribute to the history of one of the oldest historic Black community in the City of Miami. As one of the few remaining buildings of its time, a seemingly ordinary rooming house becomes significant for the larger role it serves in preserving the history and architecture of Miami's Black community. It was designated a historic site by the City of Miami in 2006 and fully restored in 2010. Now it serves as a gallery and event space.