Darren Jordan, all at once, is a painter, curator, Caribbean, Canadian, expat from England, husband, father, youth care counsellor at the Royal Alexandra Hospital, nerd, sartorialist and rum enthusiast. He listens to hip-hop, soul and jazz, but also country (“white man’s reggae,” as his father once described it). He frequently employs quotes from Shakespeare in conversation, amidst explanations of why Spider-Man is one of the more relatable superheroes. He’s a breakdancing b-boy who grew into a Renaissance man and, once a year, these expressions of himself coalesce into his role as curator of Edmonton’s 5 Artists 1 Love art exhibit.
Held every February in celebration of Black History Month, five artists are chosen to represent Edmonton’s multifaceted black community. The art included covers a range of genres and media. He has paired opera singers with rappers, spoken word poets with painters. Each arrangement brings something you may not have expected. Does it challenge? Does it inform? Does it portray an elegant taste?
The same can be said for his wardrobe. It’s not the pieces themselves, but the way they’re put together that bring out the avant garde in his clothing. Classic style juxtaposed with modern patterns, a suit redefined by a splash of colour from a bow tie. Are his outfits scholarly Oxford with an urban aesthetic? Or maybe street-style, highly refined?
Doesn’t matter what you call it. At the end of the day, it’s a Darren Jordan.
I understand the five artists, but what’s the one love?
The one love is art, music, self-expression, culture. I’ve mentioned many things for the one. You fill in the blank, it all fits. I think primarily it’s the love of art and culture.
What was the idea behind 5 Artists 1 Love?
The whole point is to show that Edmonton is extremely diverse culturally and that, within the black community, there is a cultural mosaic that people need to know about. My experience as a black man from England raised by Caribbean parents in Canada is different from the guy who just landed and is an immigrant from Sudan. The common denominator is we have a certain degree of melanin in our skin and a similar narrative in some ways, but everyone is coming with these different stories and experiences, and I try to make sure that’s reflected in the show. The styles are all very different, and everyone that’s in the show has their own story.