Work samples

  • Video of Initial Paint Throwing to "Try a Little Tenderness"

     This video shows the first stage of creating what would become “When Otis Redding Sang ‘Try a Little Tenderness’.”

  • Mad Train Home

    This is my first commissioned pop-up accordion book (2023) of writer Scott Hick’s short-short story, “Mad Train Home.” 6 in. x 50 in. mixed media

  • Jazz
    Jazz

    For this jazz-inspired double-sided pop-up accordion art book (2022), I used clips from a music sheet and logged numbers instead of words to represent the language of jazz. 5 in. x 22" mixed media 

  • When Mama Nataska Sang Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
    When Mama Nataska Sang "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child"

    This is the fourth painting (2023) in my Ancestors in the Paint series created while listening to Wapajea Walks on Water aka Nataska Hasan's haunting version of "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child." 48 in. x 36 in. Oil, acrylic, cotton twin, and mirror on canvas

About Mama Nef

Baltimore native Lenett Nef'fahtiti Partlow-Myrick aka Mama Nef is a visual artist, poet-writer, curator, educator, spirARTual activist, and principal artist for Partlow Art. She creates art out of her lived experience as an African-descendant female residing on occupied Native territory in the United States. Her father taught her to draw at age four. She first performed on stage at age six and started writing “on purpose” at age 9. She maintains a full, disciplined artistic… more

Mama Nef's Ancestors in the Paint Series

The Ancestors in the Paint series emerged at the confluence of face pareidolia, ancestor veneration, movement, and jazz + blues + R&B music. Each painting begins with a song that I must feel in my bones, my heart, and my soul. Nothing in this series is preconceived or sketched out. The rhythms, melody, lyrics, and instrumental arrangements in each song inform the colors of the painting. For example, “Mack the Knife” called for russet tones of dried blood while Sly & the Family Stone’s “Higher” insisted on a lot of psychedelic red. While listening to a song, the music moves through my body, out of my hands, and onto the canvas. It gets messy. And then I wait—sometimes for weeks or months until faces or body parts begin to appear out of splashes of dried paint. Sometimes they disappear or take on different shapes before I begin to outline each form with ink markers and color them in with oil and acrylic paints. I never know what or who will appear to tell a different side of a song’s story, to deepen its hues. I may include other elements, such as glass glitter and mirror pieces as the painting dictates. I do not control the outcome. I must let go, wait, and see.

My husband made the first video in 2021 of me throwing paint in a friend’s basement to Otis Redding’s classic recording of “Try a Little Tenderness.” The first image that appeared weeks later, on the right side of the canvas, reminded me of one of those old-school R&B singers I used to enjoy at the Royal Theater in the 1960s. Head thrown back, body bent, and wailing. And I knew somehow, without doubt, that every figure who appeared on that canvas was an ancestor who had come to tell a piece of the song’s story. Hence, the title of this series: Ancestors in the Paint. I have subsequently done the outlining and coloring of faces and forms in every other painting while sitting (or standing) next to the ancestor altar in my home. Only once has an ancestor appeared immediately after dripping paint and tears on the canvas while grieving over the health of a son and listening to Wapajea Walks on Water aka Nataska Hasan’s haunting version of “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child.” My gut tells me it was an ancient ancestor from the future who came to bring me solace. This is why I continue to hang out at the messy confluence of face pareidolia, ancestor veneration, movement, music, and paint to see what else will emerge to give my creative life new meaning.

  • Video of Initial Paint Throwing to "Try a Little Tenderness"

    This video shows the first stage of creating what would become “When Otis Redding Sang ‘Try a Little Tenderness’.”

  • Video of Initial Paint Throwing to "Higher"

    This video shows the first stage of creating what would become “When Sly and the Family Stone Sang ‘Higher’."

  • Video of Initial Paint Throwing to "Dinah"

    This video shows the first stage of creating what would become “When Louis Armstrong Sang ‘Dinah’ (circa 1933.”

  • Video of Initial Paint Throwing to "Mack the Knife"

     This video shows the first stage of creating what would become “When Ella Fitzgerald Sang "Mack the Knife’."

  • AITH_Louis A_0.jpg
    AITH_Louis A_0.jpg

    This is the fifth painting (2023) in my Ancestors in the Paint series created to the great Louis Armstrong’s live version of “Dinah” (circa 1933).

    48 in. x 36 in. Acrylic, wax pastels, ink, and glitter glass

  • When Mama Nataska Sang Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
    When Mama Nataska Sang "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child"

    This is the fourth painting (2023) in my Ancestors in the Paint series created to Wapajea Walks on Water aka Nataska Hasan’s haunting version of “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child.”  48 in. x 36 in. Oil, acrylic, cotton twine, and mirror on canvas

  • When Sly and the Family Stone Sang Higher
    When Sly and the Family Stone Sang "Higher"

    This is the third painting (2023) in my Ancestors in the Paint series created to Sly and the Family Stone’s classic Woodstock live version of “Higher."  40 in. x 30 in. acrylic, ink, and mirror on canvas

  • When Ella Sang Mack the Knife
    When Ella Sang "Mack the Knife"

    This is the second painting (2023) in my Ancestors in the Paint series created to Ella Fitzgerald’s swinging live version of “Mack the Knife."  40 in. x 30 in. Oil, acrylic, ink, and glass glitter on canvas

  • When Otis Redding Sang Try a Little Tenderness
    When Otis Redding Sang "Try a Little Tenderness"

    This is the first painting (2021) in my Ancestors in the Paint series initially created while listening to the great Otis Redding's classic song, "Try a Little Tenderness."  24 in. x 36 in. Acrylic, ink, and glass glitter on canvas

Mama Nef's Mixed Media Book Art

PROJECT #2: Mama Nef’s Mixed Media Book Art

I love books.  I love how they smell and feel, their different textures and sizes, the way they weigh in my hands and lap, and the foreplay of their pages against my fingertips.  I love the personality of their Titles and colorful covers and their solid-colored covers with no text—that’s so sexy. And how their inner parts get laid,  overlaid,  blocked,  flushed,  and  s           t           r           e           w           n   across the territory of pages for readers’ consumption.  The more delicious the content, the better.            

I love bookmaking, too. It’s the perfect medium for channeling my visual­literary creative selves simultaneously without having to choose to be a writer or a visual artist. It’s also a contemplative practice that centers me in the present, in that holy state of “no mind” where thoughts yield to pure creative impulses. That’s where all the magic happens.  That’s where the art gets made.

“The love is in the details,” says Oprah. And I agree.  It’s in every piece of paper, every color, word, number, font, visual, and appliqué I use.  It’s in every stitch of the spine, every cut, every layer of glue, and each meticulous measurement. Every element contributes to the whole.  It’s a fine, intricate art form.

I may start out with an idea for one kind of book, but the finished piece is always a surprise. All I have to do is trust my creative process implicitly and not be attached to outcomes. Forget about making perfect art.  It’s all about showing up to the work and creating art from the heart. That’s what I call creative freedom.

My book art pieces are, summarily, narratives inspired by Spirit, magic, nature, the marriage of images and words, the indigenous African American experience, the conjure / hoodoo / root medicine tradition, and reverence for life.

Special thanks to my bookmaking partner Jenny O’Grady for daily inspiration; to Rebecca Childers for teaching me how to breathe a book alive; and to Kendra Kopelke for teaching me that “a book can be anything.”

  • Mad Train Home

    This is my first commissioned pop-up accordion book (2023) of writer Scott Hick’s short-short story, “Mad Train Home.” 6 in. x 50 in. mixed media

  • Book Poem Book #2
    Book Poem Book #2

    This is my second single poem chap book constructed with 1 cigar box and featuring the classic poem “We Wear The Mask” by Paul Laurence Dunbar with stanzas written around the box and on sheets of paper overhanging a simulated stage. 14 in. x 7 in. x 5” mixed media 

  • Box Poem Book #2
    Box Poem Book #2

    This is my second single poem chap book constructed with 1 cigar box and featuring the classic poem “We Wear The Mask” by Paul Laurence Dunbar with stanzas written around the box and on sheets of paper overhanging a simulated stage. 14 in. x 7 in. x 5” mixed media 

  • MIchael
    MIchael

    This Escher-inspired collage drawing (2004) tells a short visual-literary story in biblical language of one of the greatest basketball games played by the G.O.A.T., Michael Jordon. 11 in. x 8 in. graphite pencil on velum

  • Breakthrough
    Breakthrough

    This is my first 1-page book (1989) that tells the story of how I survived the lowest point in my life while stitching the centerpiece of the page, made of floor tile, from my front porch over a 3-month period. 12 in. x 12 in. mixed media

  • Box Poem Book #1
    Box Poem Book #1

    This is my first single poem chap book constructed with cigar boxes that invites readers to experience a 3-D poem with each stanza written on circle pieces of bark paper. 16 in. x 10 in. mixed media 

  • Box Poem #1
    Box Poem #1

    This is my first single poem chap book constructed with cigar boxes that invites readers to experience a 3-D poem with each stanza written on circle pieces of bark paper. 16 in. x 10 in. mixed media 

  • Jazz
    Jazz

    For this jazz-inspired double-sided pop-up accordion art book (2022), I used clips from a music sheet and logged numbers instead of words to represent the language of jazz. 5 in. x 22" mixed media 

  • Jazz
    Jazz

    For this jazz-inspired double-sided pop-up accordion art book (2022), I used clips from a music sheet and logged numbers instead of words to represent the language of jazz. 5 in. x 22" mixed media