Head Work

I have long admired Jean-Michel Basquiat.

When I recently read about his obsession with drawing human heads, how the skull became portal, how repetition became inquiry, I felt a quiet recognition. He wasn’t drawing likeness. He was excavating identity.

That resonates.

For much of my artistic life, I have returned to abstract self-portraiture as a way to understand my own mixed-race identity. Before the weaving, before the marine debris and sacred vessels, there were faces. Fragmented. Multiplied. Obscured.

The head was my terrain.

Inside it, I was always calculating.
Adjusting.
Disappearing and reappearing.

Mixed race.
Black woman.
Read before I could speak.

So I studied myself first.
Where to soften.
Where to sharpen.
Where to hide in plain sight.

Abstraction allowed me to map what it meant to code switch, those subtle recalibrations of voice, posture, softness, power. The masks were not theatrical; they were protective. Sometimes armor. Sometimes camouflage. Sometimes simply a way to hide in plain sight.

In those early works, faces fractured, eyes doubled, mouths silenced or amplified, I wasn’t trying to be obscure. I was trying to be honest. I was drawing the invisible labor of navigating racialized space.

The head became:

  • A map of tension
  • A container for ancestry
  • A site of translation
  • A sanctuary

Today my practice lives in fiber; knotting, wrapping, weaving memory into form. But when I look back at those early abstract self-portraits, I see the same impulse.

The masks became knots.
The layers became cordage.
The head became vessel.

Admiring Basquiat reminds me that returning to the same image again and again is not fixation, it is devotion. Returning to the head, again and again, is a way of saying: this is where my story lives.

And in that conversation, I continue to draw myself, fractured, layered, crowned, protected, learning that abstraction has always been my way home.

10 Years of Expressive Creative Soul

Bridge Art Gallery – Anniversary Opening, February 21

On February 21, Expressive Creative Soul celebrates its 10-Year Anniversary at Bridge Art Gallery, a milestone that means so much to me.

Although I won’t be able to attend in person, I will absolutely be there in spirit.

Bridge Art Gallery has been a meaningful supporter along my artistic journey. They have made space for work that is layered, socially engaged, and rooted in lived experience. They have believed in my voice and in the stories embedded in my materials. That kind of sustained support is not small, it is formative.

To be included in this anniversary exhibition feels like standing inside a shared history of courage and creative commitment.

I am honored that Wonder Women Tapestry and Wonder Woman Selfie will be featured as part of this celebration.

Wonder Women Tapestry

Created in 2018 through a series of sewing circles, Wonder Women Tapestry is a 120” x 96” collective offering. Friends, friends of friends, and even strangers off the street gathered to stitch beads, bottle caps, mirrors, and embroidered details into its surface.

The tapestry carries the energy of many hands. It honors Black womanhood not as fantasy, but as lived heroism—resilient, radiant, and communal.

Wonder Woman Selfie

Wonder Woman Selfie turns the lens inward. It is about self-representation and the power of claiming our own iconography. It asks what it means for a Black woman to frame herself as powerful—to define the narrative rather than inherit it.

Together, these works speak to community and self-definition, to gathering and to claiming space.

A Decade of Impact

For ten years, Expressive Creative Soul has uplifted artists who lead with story, culture, and truth. That consistency matters. That commitment shapes careers.

I am deeply grateful to Christopher and Cheryl Mack for their vision and for walking alongside artists with integrity and heart.

While I may not be physically present on February 21, know that my gratitude, my spirit, and my celebration are fully there.

Congratulations to Bridge Art Gallery on 10 powerful years. May the next decade be even bolder.

With love and appreciation,
Theda Sandiford

Big Mouth On View

Catch Big Mouth on View at Paradigm Talent Agency NYC Office through the end of February

This body of work is a collection of one sided conversations. As a woman, I find it is often easier to make my way in the world by keeping my mouth shut. To simply grin and bare it when haters, well meaning friends or co-workers say or do something incorrect or insensitive.

As a child, my father would say to me, “Better to be thought a fool than open your mouth and remove all doubt”. So in keeping my mouth shut, I learned, to be seen, and selectively heard.

With ‘Big Mouth’, I am all of it. The sass, the crass, the erudite and more than that, aware. Aware of the language used to quiet me down. To remind me of what is and most importantly, what isn’t being said.

Digital Big Mouths- New Metallic Photo Prints

My status as “other” does not always grant the luxury to say what is truly there for me, to correct a slight or present an alternative point of view. I have to be vigilantly self aware, and know the right time to speak up or how to frame my words so that they can be received in the best possible light. Sharing my uncensored opinion can quickly get me labeled as being “too big in a room” or worse an “Angry Black Woman”. When that happens, full stop. My opinion is dismissed outright. Somewhere along the way, I’ve even stopped correcting people who mispronounce my name. It’s Thee-duh if you are interested.

11″x14″ print in frame, 20″x16″ total size.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dn9-v0sgPIw&w=560&h=315]

An Experiment…

What if i let my mind wander and see where my hands lead me…

These abstract figurative self portraits where made over the course of 5 weekends using the fine print from my MS medication, Tysbari and other recycled paper scrapes Ive been hoarding all year.

Acrylic paint, Sharpie, colored pencils, pastels, Distress Stain, mica spray, Tysabri newsprint, hand printed deli paper, construction paper, recycled Tazo tea box, tulle, glitter stars, glitter glue and rhinestones on 12″x9″Canson paper.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries?list=PLk2jgVFOoq2h3bpqr0i8_RGq5v_WZWzw5&w=560&h=315]