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Artists
Lester Lashley
Popularly depicted in Wadsworth Jarrell’s acrylic painting, Coolade Lester (1970), Lester Lashley (b. 1935) is an artist and musician whose creative legacy is celebrated both locally and nationally. He studied at the American Academy of Art in Chicago and at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He was a founding member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, an organization that emerged during the Black Arts Movement in Chicago with the goal of developing a platform for musical experimentation and innovation. Lashley played the trombone and the bass throughout his life and performed with the AACM across the world. He also produced a number of serigraphs, screenprints, and other mixed media works, several of which are housed in private collections and at the Art Institute of Chicago and have been exhibited in major museums such as the Museum of Contemporary Art in Detroit and the Smart Museum of Art. His creative endeavors celebrate the beauty of Blackness in America and through his work, he seeks to create new paths for Black Americans to find connection to their African roots.