ju st o u t ▼ d o eem b o r 1, I M S ▼ 2 0 TRIBUTE Honoring a tenacious artist The death of Essex Hemphill is a blow to the literary community by Kristine Chatwood he literary world suffered a major loss last month with the death of poet Essex Hemphill. Hemphill died Nov. 4, in Philadelphia, of AIDS-related complications. He was 38. Bom in Chicago and raised in Washington, D.C., Hemphill was 14 years old when he began writing. ‘Tablets, journals, those became my confidants,” he told columnist Deb Price in a recent inter­ view. At the same time that he discovered his gift for writing, Hemphill also dis­ covered his sexuality. His life became the story of the coming together of these two selves— the artist and the black gay man. Hemphill told Deb Price: “I started writing about and addressing my homo­ sexuality because it wasn’t there in the black text. And I needed something to be there to validate that my experience was real for me.” Hemphi 11 founded the Nethula Jour­ nal o f Contemporary Literature i n 1978, and ran the magazine for several years. In the early ’80s he formed Cinqud, a poetry-performance group that at vari­ ous times included Way son Jones, Larry Duckette and Chi Hughes. The Coffee­ house, a Washington, D.C., gathering spot for black gay artists, provided him with a refuge from the racism of the District and a place to nurture his artis­ tic growth. When his friend author-activist Jo­ seph Beam died of AIDS-related com­ plications in 1988 while working on the anthology Brother to Brother: New Writings by Black Gay Men, Hemphill took over the task of editing the manu­ script. The book, published in 1991, won Hemphill the Lambda Award for editing. In 1992, Penguin published Cer­ emonies. For this collection of poems, prose and expository writing on the black gay experience and urban life in the United States, he was awarded the National Library Association’s New Authors in Poetry Award. He self-published the books Diamonds in the T Kitty (1982), Plums (1983), Earth Life (1985), and Conditions (1986). His work has also ap­ peared in Black Scholar, Essence Magazine, Painted Bride Quarterly, Gargoyle, OUTWEEK, and other publications. His poems are featured in two of Marlon Riggs’ films, Tongues Untied and ships, including a PEW Charitable Trust Fellow­ ship in the Arts. In 1993, he was a visiting scholar at the J. Paul Getty Center for the History of Art and Humanities. Hemphill was uncompromising in his work. In a Washington Blade story, his friend Wayson said, Hemphill’s artistic achievements more than justify his tenacity. Hemphill’s impact on black gay men in gen­ eral and black gay writers in particular is pro­ found. “If it hadn’t been for him and for writers such as Stephen Corvin and Joe Beam, who were published and saw success in the mid- 1980s, I don’t know if 1 would have had the courage to write a story about black gay men,” author E. Lynn Harris told the Blade. “He was speaking for a segment of the population that hadn’t been heard.” Harris added, “We’ve lost another great African American gay writer who contributed a lot but could have con­ tributed more, if there had not been this disease and [there had been] more time.” In the same Blade story, Larry Duckette said, “ He charged and in­ spired so many people—especially black gay Americans— into appreci­ ating and loving themselves. He had such a talent and was so eloquent in his instructions to us. I think he will al­ ways be rem em bered. All o f us changed because of his message.” At the time of his death, Hemphill was working on three projects. The first, Standing in the Gap, is a novel about the mother of a gay man with A IDS, who challenges a preacher ’ s con­ demnation of her son. Bedside Com­ panions is a collection of short stories by black gay men. The third project is The Evidence o f Being, narratives of older black gay men. Hemphi II is survived by his friends; his mother, MantaleneClark Hemphill “/ started^uniting about and addressing my homosexuality because it wasn 7 of Clinton, Md.; his father, Warren A. there in the black text. And I needed something to he there to validate that Hemphill Sr. of Ft. Washington, Md.; three sisters,Ty wan Hemphill and Lois my experience was real for me." Holmes, both of Washington, D.C., and S andra L ittlejo h n of — Hssex Hemphill Lawrenceville, Ga.; and one brother, Warren A. Hemphill Jr. of High Point, N.C. Jones said that Hemphill constantly pushed for Funeral services were held Nov. 9 at Full Black Is, Black A in ’t, and in the documentary “clarity and honesty of expression in his work.” Gospel AME Zion Church in Temple Hills, Md. Looking fo r Langston. Though some found him to be demanding, Jones Hemphill received several writing fellow-