Creative Revolutionaries Hall of Fame
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Ferdi Alici
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Shane Allbritton
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Cindy Allen
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Refik Anadol
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Carolina Aragón
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020
Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.

Creative Revolutionary
Shane Allbritton and Norman Lee, artists and Co-Founders of RE:site, use public space to consider community, identity, and narrative. They draw on a site’s cultural landscape to generate strong narratives that resonate with a community’s local meanings. Dynamic, multi-layered works meld art, architecture, and landscape, resulting in transformative public installations. Their commemorative work is emotion-laden; From Absence to Presence, Commemorating Contributions of Enslaved Peoples at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, replicates a slave quarter, evoking the locale’s archaeological history. Poetry becomes dramatically illuminated, an eternal vigil to the memory and resilience of the enslaved people who lived on the college grounds.
2020