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Wes Jackson, The New President of BRIC, Wants People To Be Their Authentic Selves

BRIC, a leading, multi-disciplinary arts and media institution based in Brooklyn, N.Y., has appointed Wes Jackson president. 

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Jackson has a resume few can equal. In addition to his new presidential duties, Jackson serves as director of the Business of Creative Enterprises (BCE) Program and senior executive in residence at Emerson College.

He’s also produced concerts for Nas, The Roots, Dave Matthews Band, The Fugees, and A Tribe Called Quest. His Seven Heads Entertainment helped launch the careers of Yasiin Bey (Mos Def), Talib Kweli, El-P (Run The Jewels), Common, and others.

If that isn’t enough, Jackson founded Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival.

The professor and hip-hop

lover previously worked with BRIC Arts Media as a creator and speaker in several capacities since 2016. Jackson knows how important BRIC is to Brooklyn and the arts, which is why he can’t wait to get to work and take BRIC to new heights.

“I’m super excited, I know it sounds like a cliché but I can’t wait to get to work,” Jackson tells BLACK ENTERPRISE.

“I had a great time meeting a lot of the faculty and senior faculty and the board members. When I was a programmer, BRIC helped me out. So now to be on the other side all these years later, to help out that version of me lurking around, it’s everything. And the potential I see in the organization I think we’re going to transform the game.”

Jackson takes over a cultural icon in Brooklyn. BRIC House is a 40,000-square-foot arts-and-media complex that features year-round live performances, visual arts exhibitions, media-making, and education programs.

The BRIC House includes two performance spaces; a major contemporary art exhibition space; a project room for small-scale contemporary art exhibitions; a glass-wall live television studio where BRIC TV, the Emmy award-winning Brooklyn-focused cable and digital network, films and broadcasts; a state-of-the-art public access media center, home to BRIC’s media education programs; and editing and podcasting studios.

Jackson told BLACK ENTERPRISE he will be who he’s always been at BRIC and he wants everyone to do the same.

“Being your authentic self and not having to assimilate in order to be a success that’s the hip-hop way of thinking,” Jackson says.

“You wanted to crush us from the beginning, yet here we are, so I don’t really feel the need to play this respectability politics,” he adds. “I don’t need to fit in. I want to get right to the work of revolution, the work of changing minds.

“So within the storied arts institution 

that this is, that’s what I’m bringing, hey bring your authentic self. Be Black, be Ukrainian, be Russian, be Puerto Rican, be lesbian, be a woman, I want all of that, we will never try to shame anyone, let’s make it about the work.”

Jackson succeeds Kristina Newman-Scott who was preceded by Leslie Griesbach Schultz.

BRIC’s programs include the free, summer-long BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival, whose 44th season is currently underway. Additionally, BRIC’s nationally recognized school-based arts and media education program reaches thousands of New York City public school students each year.

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