Alexandra Bell stands at the podium on the stage of Memorial Chapel as she delivers her convocation address.
Alexandra Bell, multidisciplinary artist, delivers the Winter Term Convocation Friday in Memorial Chapel. (Photo by Danny Damiani)

Alexandra Bell is telling stories, perhaps differently than she once envisioned.

She studied journalism as a graduate student at Columbia University, on track for what she thought would be a career in journalism. But along the way her interests drifted toward art, and her eye on newspapers began to zero in how stories were being told and presented and how much of that was shaped by biases and stereotypes.

Those revelations led her in a new, creative direction. For much of the past five years, the New York-based multidisciplinary artist has used her聽Counternarratives聽art exhibits as a form of commentary on media storytelling.

鈥淎 lot of what this is about is the ways in which you can kind of disrupt dominant narratives and what it means to kind of draw from the news to tell a different story,鈥 Bell said as she delivered the Winter Term Convocation Friday afternoon in 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 Memorial Chapel.

Counternarratives聽began as a public art exhibit in 2017, her redacted pages of the聽New York Times聽hanging on walls at intersections across Brooklyn, drawing attention to how the 2014 death of Michael Brown at the hands of a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, was covered. Her work began to draw attention to media coverage involving people of color, and the clandestine exhibit, initially hung with homemade wheatpaste, eventually brought Bell into art galleries.

Some of her works are now on exhibit at 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 Wriston Art Center and will remain there through March 11.

鈥淗er work boldly addresses urgent contemporary concerns about media and representation,鈥 said Beth Zinsli, assistant professor of art history, curator of the Wriston Art Center Galleries, and museum studies interdisciplinary area program director.

Alexandra Bell's marked up pages of the New York Times featuring the death of Michael Brown hang on a brick wall in Brooklyn, New York.
A Teenager With Promise聽launched Alexandra Bell鈥檚聽Counternarratives聽in 2017.

Bell鈥檚 art does more than just point out concerns within the media, Zinsli said. It calls on all of us to think deeply about how we conduct our own business.

鈥淎lexandra鈥檚 work serves to remind us about the need for care in the wake of violence in all its forms,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his includes the very real violence enacted against people by language, by omission, and by bias. Her work offers us insights into how to care for those whose humanity has been overlooked or discarded.鈥

Bell holds a bachelor鈥檚 degree in interdisciplinary studies in the humanities from the University of Chicago and a master鈥檚 degree in journalism from Columbia. It was while at Columbia that she started looking closely at news coverage from major media outlets.

Her mockups of pages from the聽New York Times,听New York Daily News, and other media outlets have focused on stories involving police shootings, immigration, and white supremacists, among other topics. They explore language used in headlines, how newspaper layouts can redirect the emphasis, how juxtaposition of photos can do harm.

It鈥檚 not a question of inaccuracy, Bell said. The stories are factually correct. But in an attempt at balance, newspapers and other media often give too much weight to those in power.

鈥淢y issue here is about a false balance,鈥 she said.

Sometimes, Bell said, both sides don鈥檛 deserve equal treatment. Does the leader of a white supremacist group really deserve to have his story told?

鈥淭here鈥檚 such a pursuit of a type of fairness that a lot of the power structures that determine how we live get flattened,鈥 Bell said. 鈥淎nd we end up with these kinds of gross representations of things. It鈥檚 in the layouts and it鈥檚 in the language.鈥

In side-by-side stories in the聽New York Times, the backgrounds of Brown and Darren Wilson, the officer who shot him, were explored.

鈥淭here was a kinder portrayal of Darren Wilson, the police officer, than there was of Michael Brown,鈥 Bell said.

That became the focal point of her first聽Counternarratives聽display. And the panels that were hung on the streets of Brooklyn brought mixed reactions at first. But momentum began to build.

鈥淪ome people thought it was a memorial, and in a way it was,鈥 Bell said. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 a point here about the way his death was treated.鈥

Bell said she has no desire to work for a newspaper. And, yes, she鈥檚 visited with editors at the聽New York Times聽several times since her art work began getting noticed.

Her message to the聽Times聽and other newspapers? It鈥檚 time to lean into advocacy journalism.

鈥淛ournalism that isn鈥檛 solutions-based journalism is of very little interest to me,鈥 Bell said. 鈥淚 think there is so much information coming at us that I think journalism has to have a more advocacy-based role. That is how a lot of Black newspapers have functioned. I鈥檝e been spending a lot of time reading old Black newspapers. They were mission driven and they needed to be. They were abolitionists. I still feel like that need exists.鈥