Hope and Faith 's profile
D.C.-born, Hyattsville, MD-raised twins Hope & Faith McCorkle (b. 1999) hold BFA’s from New York University in Studio Art with concentrations in Psychology and Social and Cultural Analysis, respectively. Formerly enrolled in the Visual and Performing Arts program at the Jim Henson School of Arts, Media, and Communication, the two have been cooking, curating, and creating art since they were 7 years old. At 17, the twins lost their mother to the rare lung condition of Sarcoidosis. Since then, the pair have used their art as a space of healing, creating immersive experiences that engage with loss, grief, and identity, coming together to form an interdisciplinary collaborative. Their work speaks to their profound relationship as twins, conceptualizing their endured shared experiences, yet different perspectives.
Through vibrant hues, Black ritual, and spiritual imagery, Hope & Faith collaborate utilizing storytelling and collage to conflate the ideas of reconstruction and resilience within the Black experience. Their work serves as testaments to healing by example, honoring the Black mother, spirit, food, and childlike wonder in the stories told through their scrolls, films, installations, and other creations. There is a sense of joy and wonder that can be felt when viewers experience the pair’s work– Hope and Faith’s intentional use of textures, shiny materials, and patterns enhance the story and interpersonal experience shared as twins and with their communities. Materials are broken down and rebuilt to reinforce the journey toward completion, emphasizing the colorful, multidimensional layers of the inner and outer worlds they inhabit as Black Indigenous creators. The lightworkers actively channel collective consciousness within their practice, traveling various dimensions and connecting 2D, 3D, and 4D elements to birth and piece together a new understanding of experience, one that is affirming, uplifting, and powerfull. What they create isn't just work, nor is it art. It is the manifestation of hope and faith.
BmoreArt, WJZ-TV, PGCTV News, VoyageBaltimore, Visionary Art Collective, Medium, Girls Global Academy, and the DC Public Library have recognized the pair's work. They are recipients of an Andy Warhol Foundation’s Grit Fund Grant, a DC CAH Art Bank Grant, MSAC Creativity Grants, and numerous other awards. The duo has work permanently installed at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library in D.C. and has works in private collections worldwide. They are currently expanding their practices individually and collectively as Artists-in-Residence at Creative Alliance in Baltimore, Maryland.
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