I'm a multidisciplinary artist using my work to uplift Black heritage while confronting anti-Black erasure.

bio


Abbie Cienna (si·en·na) aka Chantel Aberdeen (1973-) is a multidisciplinary artist, and author of the poem “Note on Memorial Day.” Her work confronts Anti-Black Erasure and uplifts Black heritage, examining and exploring forms of liberation. Upcoming projects include a wall calendar of Black Liberation Emancipation Abolition and Freedom Days, and a book about the history of Black freedom of speech and press in the United States. Abbie Cienna was born in Brooklyn, NY, has lived in 6 states, and has documented her U.S. and Caribbean ancestry back into the 19th century. For more, visit abbiecienna.com.

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NOTE ON MEMORIAL DAY

Note on Memorial Day (2025) is a protest poem by Abbie Cienna in response to attacks on First Amendment rights in the USA, and specifically, a systematic Anti-Black Erasure of U.S. history. She wrote the poem after a 2025 contest challenged writers to create original poems using a predetermined set of words and phrases inspired by those that were flagged for removal from U.S. government webpages and in research papers during the Trump administration. Note on Memorial Day (2025) includes 22 out of 101 of those “forbidden” words and phrases. In the poem, an ancestral narrator uses alliteration, assonance, consonance, rhyme, and rhythm to tell the story of events surrounding a magnificent Decoration Day ceremony in Charleston, South Carolina on May 1, 1865. It's a remarkable, though widely unknown, story of resilience and patriotism during The Civil War. Decoration Day evolved into what we now know as Memorial Day, which became a federal holiday in 1971. In Note on Memorial Day (2025), the narrator reaffirms Black heritage while challenging and confronting acts of erasing Black contributions from U.S. history. The title is a nod to Langston Hughes' poem, Note on Commercial Theatre (1940) in which Hughes critiqued the systematic erasure of the Black American experience from Blues music during his time. The narrator in Hughes’ poem ends with a passive reflection. In contrast, Note on Memorial Day ends with a dynamic warning for the audience.

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    Mailing Address: P. O. BOX 2074 | 8409 Lee Hwy | Merrifield, VA 22116-2074, USA

     

    Email: [email protected]