Listen Live

Women To Know -
JD Barnes
Women To Know Covers | iOne Editorial | 2025-04-23

“I really see my sculptures as guardians. I see them as protectors,” Merriweather told HelloBeautiful. “I am making my safe space, literally, and I’m hoping that my sculptures also give a safe space to other people.”

Merriweather said she picked up clay work in the eighth grade after dabbling in different art forms (like graphic design and photography) throughout her childhood. She said after taking her first clay class, she fell in love with the feeling of cool, mushy, wet, mud between her fingers. “I love to get dirty in my work,” she said. “I’m a tangible person. I like to touch textures. And I’ve always been that way since I was a kid.”

By the time she got to high school, Merriweather said she began to peruse the exhibition halls of museums in search of inspiration, but all she saw staring back at her were white, alabaster stone faces. “A lot of sculptures in museums didn’t look like me. And I didn’t really like that,” she said. “So, I decided to make work that looked like my family.”

Murjoni Mayweather - Women To Know
Murjoni Mayweather - Women To Know
Murjoni Mayweather - Women To Know

Every piece of pottery Merriweather produces is an attempt to publicly normalize Blackness. She said recently, she’s been intentional about directing her outward creative process inward for her own nourishment, too. One of her exhibits, Seed, which was on display fall of 2024 at the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, was created as an ode to her own personal evolution. The piece features unnaturally elongated, stone heads that appear to grow like blooms from various soil mounds on the floor. “Seed was about my own healing, my own growth, how to ground myself,” she said. Creating Seed allowed Merriweather to work through her own impatience, as she reflected on the slow, tiny seed to green sprout germination system of nature. In a time where urgency and microwave-paced progress rules as culture’s king, Merriweather urges artists to resist the impulse to get rich or famous fast. Instead, she believes the art of becoming is a miracle itself.

Murjoni Merriweather’s Clay Sculptures Shape Black Style Into Renaissance Era Art  was originally published on ionehellobeautiful.staging.go.ione.nyc