Amoke Kubat (’17) Transforms Artistry into Activism

Activism VOICES

 

Smiling person wearing a blue turban and top, and long blue earrings.

In 1987, Amoke Kubat (’17) moved from Los Angeles to Minneapolis. “I wanted to work with Prince,” she explains. Two years later, she began a 25-year career teaching special education in North Minneapolis with Minneapolis Public Schools. Toward the end of that life chapter, Amoke discovered art, and art connected her to United.

Connecting to United

Chiaki O’Brien, a SAORI weaving artist from Japan, came to United for an artist residency during a summer institute. Amoke, who had already met Chiaki and wanted to learn more about SAORI weaving, came too. “I sat and watched United faculty and students learn to weave,” Amoke recalls. “I was invited to weave.”

After the event, she continues, “staff encouraged me to apply to the seminary. As a non-Christian, I was very reluctant to do so.” Rev. Craig Lemming (’17), then a student who worked in admissions, walked Amoke to her bus stop and they began to talk. “Craig and I had a really deep conversation about United, social justice and religion, and Yoruba culture,” she recounts, and she missed her bus.

After Craig chased down the bus, he handed Amoke an admissions packet and more information about United. “I felt I owed him that much for his time and making sure I got home,” she reflects.

The Next Chapter

Amoke earned an MA in Religious Leadership and a Certificate in Black Church Leadership at United. She also made lasting connections with fellow students and faculty—including Dr. Rufus Burrow, Rev. Dr. Jann Cather Weaver, Dr. Margaree Levy (’17), and Rev. Dr. John Lee (’19)—who were “inspiring and supportive.” United “definitely holds a special place in my heart,” she asserts, and seminary was “a challenging but stellar experience!”

Looking back, Amoke has especially fond memories of Rev. Dr. Wilson Yates and the arts curriculum at United. “I loved the Art Practicum that [Rev. Dr. Cindi Beth Johnson] taught during United’s Summer Institute in Spirituality and the Arts and every member of that class. I would have loved to get a certificate in Art and Spirituality!”

Leaning into Truth

A lifelong learner, Amoke has earned a BA, two MAs, two certificates, and is still growing in knowledge. She has also experienced the worst of humanity—from the 1965 Watts and 1992 Rodney King riots in Los Angeles, to the 2020 murder of George Floyd and world pandemic—and fought tirelessly to empower mothers and families in disadvantaged communities.

It is the grounding and divine practices of making art, living with honesty, and forging relationships, that bring her some measure of solace. The recipient of multiple grants and fellowships, Amoke is the founding executive director of YO MAMA’S HOUSE, Inc., an art and healing space for mothers. She is also the author of Missing Mama: My Story of Loss, Sorrow and Healing, as well as self-referential plays such as Angry Black Woman & Well-Intentioned White Girl, and many other short stories and articles. She and her work have appeared in installations at the Weisman Art Museum, the South London Gallery, the Minnesota Museum of American Art, and the Cora McCovey Health and Wellness Center.

Though she will turn 74 in August, and lives with chronic pain, Amoke focuses on what’s next. On April 29, she became the YWCA Minneapolis’ Inaugural Camille J. Gage Fellowship Awardee, she is in discussion to have another show at the Minnesota Museum of American Art, and there is more writing and publishing to come in 2025. For her countless contributions, unwavering dedication, and indomitable spirit, we feel incredibly blessed to have Amoke Kubat as a United alum.

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