
To me, probably the most distinct demarcations of New York Metropolis’s El Barrio — Spanish for “the neighborhood” — are the glistening mosaics adorning constructing facades and subway station partitions. Depicting drummers and jazz singers and infrequently hinting at spiritual references, these accessible but gripping photos imbue the neighborhood I grew up in with colour, rhythm, and complexity. But it surely wasn’t till I went to the Museum of the Metropolis of New York’s centennial exhibition, Byzantine Bembé, that I realized concerning the profound cultural and social dynamics that underpin these public works. Painter, illustrator, and printmaker Manny Vega — now the museum’s first artist-in-residence — created many of those mosaics and murals in celebration of necessary figures in Puerto Rican and Latinx communities, telling the tales of his very personal “El Barrio” by way of his work.
Hanging above the doorway of the exhibition, a beaded Gelede masks, worn by male Yoruba dancers to honor maternal figures, alerts the central themes in Vega’s work. His personal mom and sister, whom he refers to as “the female divine,” are sometimes depicted amongst native social justice figures, musicians, and spiritual figures who formed his upbringing in addition to his group, reminiscent of Puerto Rican educator and civil rights activist Dr. Antonia Pantoja, Cuban grasp percussionist Chano Pozo, and his highschool artwork trainer Marshall Davis. The Yoruba beading method — additionally prevalent in his costume design — factors to the prevalence of pan-African non secular practices within the diaspora to this present day.
All through the exhibition, a mélange of pen and ink sketches, Sharpie drawings, etchings, watercolors, and mosaics convey Vega’s multidimensional visible lexicon, which he calls “Byzantine hip-hop.” For example, a textured and multisensorial 2009 mosaic of jazz pioneer Tito Puente feels as vibrant because the jazz-centric music that performs all through the exhibition.

One other hanging etching, “San Lázaro en El Barrio” (2019), depicts Saint Lazarus getting back from the useless whereas Saint Michael strikes evil spirits in entrance of the tenements on one hundred and tenth Avenue and Fifth Avenue. It conveys Vega’s profound connection to Candomblé, a Nineteenth-century Afro-Brazilian faith developed by enslaved people who lives on in El Barrio. Impressed by {a photograph} by Hiram Maristany, one other etching plate options the physique of Younger Lords activist Julio Roldán, who died in 1970 whereas incarcerated at a downtown jail known as “the Tombs,” elevating questions round racial politics and felony justice in New York.
The piece that may greatest encapsulate the ethos of the exhibition is a 2023 mosaic entitled “WTF.” Beneath its depiction of a pair on a bike are the phrases “WTF 2020,” with little different imagery. To me, the wording particularly recollects the chaos of the pandemic, demonstrations, and social actions that outlined the 12 months. It embodies the best way that Vega’s mosaics proceed to rejoice the wealthy cultural tapestry of El Barrio and the spirit of its residents, inviting guests to mirror upon the heritage, identification, and activism of our neighborhoods.


Byzantine Bembé: New York by Manny Vega continues on the Museum of the Metropolis of New York (1220 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Avenue, East Harlem, Manhattan) by way of December 8.