- Maya Wynn Boyd
- Coleman A. Young, ca. 2001
- Acrylic On Canvas
- Signature: Signed "Maya" in lower left corner
- Inv: 2026.01.011
Title: Coleman A. Young
Date: 2001
Creator: Maya Wynn Boyd
Format: Painted portrait
Scope and Context:
This expressive portrait of Coleman A. Young was created by Maya Wynn Boyd during the latter years of her BFA studies at Moore College of Art & Design in Philadelphia (ca. 2000–2001). The works reflect both personal lineage and Detroit’s broader cultural history, capturing a towering figure whose political and cultural leadership re-shaped the city in the second half of the twentieth century.
As the daughter of poet and scholar Dr. Melba Joyce Boyd—whose own work is deeply intertwined with Detroit’s political history—Maya Wynn Boyd’s choice of subjects reflects an intimate engagement with Detroit’s intellectual and political inheritance.
Coleman A. Young (1918–1997)
Coleman A. Young was Detroit’s first Black mayor, elected in 1973 in the aftermath of intense political upheaval, including the dismantling of the STRESS (Stop the Robberies, Enjoy Safe Streets) police unit, which had terrorized Black communities through violent decoy operations. Young’s election marked a watershed moment in Detroit’s political history, signaling a new era of Black municipal leadership and urban self-determination.
Young was a complex and often polarizing figure, but his tenure fundamentally altered the racial and political landscape of the city. He embodied post-civil rights Black political power in an urban industrial center grappling with deindustrialization, white flight, and structural inequality.
Visual Analysis – Portrait of Coleman A. Young
In Maya Wynn Boyd’s portrait, Young is rendered in thick, heavily layered impasto brushwork. The paint surface is textured and tactile, with vibrant strokes of red, gold, ochre, and muted greens building the contours of his face. Rather than smooth realism, the portrait uses fragmentation and chromatic layering to suggest depth, lived experience, and interior complexity.
Young’s expression is composed yet alert. His gaze is slightly off-center, suggesting contemplation rather than direct confrontation. The background—an abstract field of vertical, muted strokes—evokes both urban grit and emotional atmosphere. The dark suit and red-toned tie ground the portrait in political formality, but the expressive treatment of the face destabilizes conventional mayoral portraiture. This is not institutional flattery; it is interpretive memory.
By painting Young & Randall while completing her BFA, Maya Wynn Boyd situates her artistic training within a lineage of Detroit Black radical thought. The portraits are not merely likenesses; they are visual meditations on leadership, memory, and Black urban modernity.
- Subject Matter: Portrait
- Collections: The Dr. Melba Joyce Boyd Literary Collection