01/27/2026
I’ve had a long term project of creating Patron Gods and Goddesses of different aspects of Black American history. This is the latest, the Patron Goddess of Black American Mermaids.
Framed in cowrie and seashell offerings to the sea, she floats in the water checking her reflection. Her head wrap is made of cotton and her blouse, pieces of flag and cotton bark root. The mermaid is also the conjurer, and this is reflected in her skirts. She carries the sea, her conjure bottles, indigo. The ships, her juju bags.
She also houses the spirit of rebellion and revenge. Uprising moves through her skirts in the form of dance and revolution. She carries her axe and wields her snakes. Surrounded by her symbols of power, she uses the water as a conduit to connect to her people.
I wanted to give her depth. Her own lore. The ability to read her complex history and wonder which water way you might find her. Is she in a flooded out city? The coast of New Orleans? Guardian of the Gullah Geechee? Cruising the Chesapeake Bay? Is she traveling the routes of the Second Middle Passage?
Zsudayka Nzinga
Patron Goddess of the Black American Mermaids
Hand dyed muslin, hand batik muslin, ink, artist printed and designed paper, seashells
47 x 33 in collaged textile
2026