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#48 – How Do Reimagined Comics Challenge Social Narratives? | Kumasi J. Barnett
Season 10 · Episode 48

#48 – How Do Reimagined Comics Challenge Social Narratives? | Kumasi J. Barnett

The Truth In This Art: Stories That Matter · Rob Lee

July 11, 20251h 1m

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Show Notes

Artist and professor Kumasi J. Barnett returns to the podcast to talk art, protest, and making work that cuts through the noise.

Known for subverting comic books through introspective reinterpretations, Barnett reflects his work today. Barnett shares the realities of being a Black painter, creating in the shadow of systemic erasure, and why some truths hit harder in spandex.

Topic Covered:

  • Why painting is the easy part—but being an artist is not
  • Rewriting comic canon to reflect modern injustice
  • Teaching art, parenting, and painting as a long game
  • Why selling out isn't the flex many think it is
  • What he’s planning next (spoiler: it's political)

🎧 Revisit Kumasi’s first episode from 2022 for more context on his powerful comic-based series.


The Truth In This Art is supported by William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund, the Maryland State Arts Council's Creativity Grant and Mayor's Individual Artist Award - Creative Baltimore Fund (Baltimore)


Host
: Rob Lee
Music: Original music by Daniel Alexis Music with additional music from Chipzard and TeTresSeis.
Production:

  • Produced by Rob Lee & Daniel Alexis
  • Edited by Daniel Alexis
  • Show Notes courtesy of Rob Lee and Transistor

Photos:

  • Rob Lee photos by Vicente Martin for The Truth In This Art and Contrarian Aquarian Media.
  • Guest photos courtesy of the guest, unless otherwise noted.

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Topics

Kumasi J. BarnettPenn State artistBlack painterscomic book artprotest artsubversive comicsart and activismpolice brutality artreimagined superheroessatirelong game artistartist as parentBlack art educatorsystemic racism in artTurner Stationpainting over comicsart and politicscreative disciplinesocial commentary artrunning for officeBlack creative resistance