One Story, Many Voices: The Creative Vision Behind the Work

By: Natisha S. Jordan aka Benu Ma’at

There is a thread running through everything I create. It moves through ancient stone carvings and sacred circles, through drumbeats banned by law and bodies that refused to go silent, through abstract paintings that pulse with elemental force, and through starships navigating corridors of stable spacetime. That thread is ancestral memory – and following it has become the defining work of my creative life.

I did not arrive at this work through a single moment of inspiration. It grew out of years of questions I could not stop asking – questions about identity, erasure, and what it really means to carry a culture forward when so much of it was deliberately taken away.

This blog post is an invitation to see that work the way I see it: not as separate projects running in parallel, but as one ongoing story told across many forms and timelines.

What threads of history or heritage have shaped the way you see the world?

The Question That Started Everything

Why are Black Americans discouraged from embracing their African roots when every other culture is celebrated for honoring theirs?

That question is not rhetorical. It is the engine behind everything you will find here. The transatlantic slave trade did not just displace bodies — it systematically dismantled cultural memory, banned sacred instruments, erased languages, and severed the living connection between African people and their cosmological inheritance. Cosmological inheritance here means the philosophical and spiritual understanding of how the universe works – the frameworks a culture uses to explain existence, time, and humanity’s place in the cosmos.

I remember the first time I realized that the movements I saw in a Breaking cipher in the Bronx were echoing something far older than Hip-Hop. That recognition did not feel like a discovery. It felt like a memory. Like something my body already knew, finally being confirmed by my mind.

But here is what the historical record also shows: the connection was never fully broken. It was hidden in plain sight. It was encoded in movement, rhythm, story, and form. And it is my mission to decode it, celebrate it, and pass it forward.

When did you first feel a deep connection to something in your own cultural heritage that you couldn’t quite explain?

The Past: Reclaiming the Physical and Philosophical Archive

Kemetic Roots and the Body as Instrument

One cornerstone of this project is an academic and creative excavation of ancient Kemetic culture – the term “Kemetic” refers to the ancient civilization of the Nile Valley, commonly called ancient Egyptian civilization. The word comes from Kemet, the name the people themselves used for their land, meaning “the Black Land.” Exploring this work on its own terms – rather than through a colonial lens – completely transforms what we understand about the origins of movement and philosophy.

On the walls of tombs at Beni Hasan and the Temple of Hathor at Dendera, you find dancers in deep backbends, airborne splits, hand-supported balances, and suspended poses that demand extraordinary strength and spatial precision. These were not performances for entertainment. They were ceremonial acts tied to cosmic renewal, sacred festivals, and the maintenance of Ma’at – the Kemetic principle of balance, truth, and universal order. Think of Ma’at as the moral and cosmic compass of an entire civilization, a living standard that governed everything from governance to daily conduct.

The dancer used the body as an instrument of cosmic law. Movement was not separate from philosophy. It was philosophy made physical.

This is the foundation of what becomes the Breaking Element of Hip-Hop Culture, and the broader African physical vocabulary that has circled the globe. The Geometric Gates – one of the core sections of this research – traces that direct lineage from Kemetic temple walls to the Bronx and beyond.

What would change about how we teach history if we traced these connections more openly?

Summary: Ancient Kemetic culture treated the moving body as a sacred instrument of cosmic law. That physical vocabulary – encoded in ceremonial dance and ritual movement – is the deep root of what eventually becomes Hip-Hop and Breaking.

The Drum, the Ban, and the Kinesthetic Counterattack

By the 18th century, colonial enslavers in North America had recognized something extraordinary: the African drum was not just a musical instrument. It was a sophisticated telecommunications system capable of organizing resistance across vast distances. The Stono Rebellion of 1739 – one of the largest slave uprisings in colonial America, in which enslaved Africans used drums to coordinate a march toward freedom – is one documented example of this power. Their response was to ban the drum entirely.

But they could not ban the body.

Enslaved Africans responded with what I call the kinesthetic counterattack – a term I use to describe the strategic redirection of movement and rhythm into forms that could not be easily suppressed or legislated away. They transformed their own bodies into percussion through foot-stomping, handclapping, and chest-beating, a practice known as patting juba. The rhythm did not die. It simply changed form.

This is where the Ring Shout enters the story.

Summary: When the drum was banned, the body became the instrument. The kinesthetic counterattack – using physical movement to preserve rhythm, communication, and cultural memory – is one of the most profound acts of creative resistance in human history.

The Ring Shout and the Kongo Cosmogram

In the praise houses of the American South, enslaved practitioners gathered in a counterclockwise circle, shuffling and singing spirituals in what became known as the Ring Shout. To outside observers, it looked like religious expression. And it was — but it was far more than that.

As historian Sterling Stuckey demonstrated, the Ring Shout is a direct retention of the Kongo Cosmogram, known as the Dikenga dia Kongo. The Kongo Cosmogram is a sacred symbol from Central African Kongo spiritual tradition that represents the cycle of existence – the movement of the sun, the journey of the human soul from birth through death and into the ancestral realm, and the continuous renewal of life. That counterclockwise circle in the Ring Shout maps that exact cosmology onto the ground of the praise house floor.

By maintaining that circle – generation after generation, on American soil – our ancestors preserved a sacred cosmic geography. They carried an entire philosophical system in their feet, encoded it in a spiritual practice, and passed it forward when no other means of transmission was available.

I think about my grandmother’s hands whenever I sit with this history. The way memory passes through the body before it ever becomes language. The Ring Shout is that passage made communal, made defiant, made eternal.

That is not just history. That is genius.

What practices in your own life might be carrying deeper meaning than you’ve ever stopped to examine?

Summary: The Ring Shout was not simply a religious practice – it was a living philosophical archive. Rooted in the Kongo Cosmogram, it preserved an entire cosmological worldview through movement, circle, and song across centuries of brutal suppression.

The Present: Art, Philosophy, and Reclamation in Real Time

Primal Elemental Abstraction

Coral Currents/Waves of Emotion (2025 Collection)

The past does not stay in the past. It resurfaces in how we create today.

Primal Elemental Abstraction (PEA) – the visual philosophy behind Wisdom Born Designs – is where ancestral energy meets modern design without asking permission. At its core, it is an approach to artmaking that treats the living forces of Earth, Water, Fire, and Air not as symbols or metaphors, but as active agents of transformation that shape every composition.

Rooted in a Bronx upbringing at the very birthplace of Hip-Hop, this work carries the same defiant, creative pulse that has always defined Black artistic expression. Growing up surrounded by that culture – the graffiti murals, the ciphers, the DJs rewiring sound systems in the park – I learned early that creation is an act of claiming space. That lesson lives in every canvas I make.

There is no rigid structure in this work, no cage of conformity. Each piece is a living dialogue between raw instinct and deliberate refinement, where emotional truth surfaces through organic form – sweeping curves, bold color contrasts, and compositions that evolve intuitively rather than according to a predetermined plan. The “Vision Without Permission” ethos at the heart of this work means exactly what it says: we do not wait for validation to create from our deepest truth.

At its core, PEA asserts that abstraction is not an escape from reality. It is a return to origin – a primal state where form and meaning coexist in fluid harmony.

This mirrors exactly what Kemetic dancers were doing on those temple walls. It echoes the Ring Shout’s insistence that movement is a form of law, a form of truth, a form of cosmic record-keeping. The medium changes. The impulse does not.

When you look at abstract art, what do you feel before you try to analyze what it means?

Summary: Primal Elemental Abstraction carries the ancestral creative impulse – the same one that shaped Kemetic ceremony and the Ring Shout – into contemporary visual art. It is intuitive, defiant, and deeply rooted in both Bronx culture and diasporic memory.

The Future: Afrofuturistic Worldbuilding

The Ledger and the Crown Series

If the past gives us roots and the present gives us practice, the future gives us possibility. That is where The Ledger and the Crown Series lives.

Afrofuturism – for those new to the term – is a cultural and creative movement that centers African and diasporic perspectives in speculative fiction, science fiction, and imagined futures. It asks: what if the future were built from our cosmologies rather than the ones imposed on us? What if ancient African philosophical frameworks guided the development of technology, governance, and interstellar civilization?

The Ledger and the Crown Series takes that question seriously. This saga is set in a universe where the laws of physics are inseparable from music and memory. Before creation, there were the Ogdoad – eight primordial potentials drawn from ancient Kemetic cosmology, representing forces like boundless water, darkness, infinite space, and unseen breath. From their resonance, the Neteru emerged – the organizing principles of the cosmos, giving existence its rhythm and order. In this world, signal is song, and a shared frequency can hold a civilization together – or tear it apart.

The two long-estranged civilizations at the heart of the story – the Shen and the Seth – are shaped by diaspora lineages, movement-as-governance, communal rhythm, and public oath-breaths. Their conflicts are not resolved through warfare. They are resolved through consensus, transparency, and shared power. Victory is measured not by battles won, but by communities empowered and humanitarian connections held open.

This is not science fiction that merely adds Black faces to existing genre frameworks. It is a complete reimagining of how civilization, governance, technology, and memory work – built from the cosmological foundations that the research into Kemetic philosophy, the Ring Shout, and the Kongo Cosmogram has uncovered.

What kind of future becomes possible when it is built from ancestral truth rather than colonial frameworks?

Summary: The Ledger and the Crown Series is Afrofuturistic worldbuilding grounded in real cosmological research. It takes the ancestral frameworks excavated in the past work – Kemetic philosophy, the Kongo Cosmogram, diasporic movement traditions – and projects them forward into speculative civilizations built on rhythm, consensus, and shared memory.

One Unbroken Line

Laid out this way, the connections become undeniable:

  • Kemetic ritual dance encodes cosmic order in the body
  • The Ring Shout preserves that cosmic geography under conditions of brutal suppression
  • Hip-Hop Culture carries the physical vocabulary forward into the 20th century
  • Primal Elemental Abstraction translates the ancestral creative impulse into contemporary visual art
  • The Ledger and the Crown Series projects that entire inheritance into speculative futures

These are not separate projects. They are chapters of the same story – a story about resilience, rhythm, cosmology, and the unbroken continuity of Black cultural creativity across time.

The thread runs from temple walls in ancient Kemet, through praise houses in the American South, through Bronx block parties, through abstract canvases, all the way to starships navigating the deep.

Which of these connections surprises you the most? Which one feels like something you already knew?

An Invitation to Follow the Journey

This work is ongoing. New research is being published. New art is being made. New worlds are being built.

If any part of this resonates with you – if you have ever felt the pull of something older and deeper running beneath the surface of your own creative life – then this space is for you.

Follow along. Engage with the ideas. Share what moves you. The choir is not yet whole, and every voice that joins it makes the harmony more complete.

© [2026] Wisdom Born Consulting, LLC. All rights reserved.

Black Abstraction: History, Legacy, and Why Recognition Matters

A Brief History of Black Abstract Art

The story of Black abstraction begins in the 1930s, when a generation of African‑American artists first entered the professional art world. Most of them, including Norman Lewis, Sam Gilliam, Alma Thomas, and Howardena Pindell, started with social‑realist or figurative work that depicted the harsh realities of segregation, poverty, and police violence.

Around the mid‑1940s a decisive shift occurred. Lewis “began experimenting with abstraction in the mid‑1940s” and, by 1946, was “exploring an overall, gestural approach to abstraction,” becoming “the only African‑American among the first generation of Abstract Expressionist artists”. This move was not merely stylistic; it reflected a growing conviction that pure visual language could convey emotional and political urgency more powerfully than literal representation:

ArtistEarly WorkTransition to AbstractionNotable Abstract Piece
Norman LewisBread‑line and eviction scenes (social realism)Mid‑1940s, gestural abstractionBonfire (1962, oil) – a swirling field of reds, oranges, and yellows that evokes a literal blaze while remaining non‑representational
Sam GilliamFabric‑draped collages with figurative hintsLate 1950s‑60s, fully abstract “draped” canvasesUntitled (c. 1970) – layered, translucent fabrics creating depth and motion
Alma ThomasFigurative depictions of Black life1950s, color‑field abstractionSpace and Time (1960) – rhythmic, concentric circles in vivid hues
Howardena PindellDocumentary‑style drawings1970s, abstract mixed‑media installationsFree, White and Black (1972) – layered splatters suggesting both chaos and control

These artists forged a new visual vocabulary that combined the urgency of their lived experience with the formal innovations of Abstract Expressionism.

The Legacy of Black Abstract Artists

  1. Expanding the Canon: For decades the mainstream narrative of Abstract Expressionism highlighted white, male figures such as Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Mark Rosenkoe. Black artists were frequently omitted from major surveys, catalogues, and critical histories. Recent exhibitions – Black Paintings, 1946‑1977 at the Studio Museum in Harlem (1998) and Norman Lewis, from the Harlem Renaissance to Abstraction (Kenkeleba Gallery, 1989)—have begun to rectify this gap, positioning Black abstraction as an essential chapter of post‑war American art.
  2. Political Resonance Through Formal Means: By abandoning literal representation, artists like Lewis argued that “painting pictures about social conditions doesn’t change the social conditions”. Instead, abstraction allowed them to encode protest, hope, and communal trauma in colour, gesture, and rhythm. Bonfire, for instance, was created during the height of the Civil Rights Movement; critics note that its “protective ring against the blaze of political circumstance” reflects the era’s “combustion point” of activism.
  3. Influence on Later Generations: The strategies pioneered by these artists—layered mark‑making, use of color as symbolic language, integration of personal narrative into non‑figurative forms – have informed contemporary Black creators working in painting, digital media, and installation. Artists such as Kerry James Marshall, Julie Mehretu, and Rashid Johnson cite the abstract legacy as a touchstone for their own explorations of identity and politics.
  4. Academic Re‑evaluation: Scholars now recognize that Black abstraction was not a peripheral footnote but a central force shaping the trajectory of modern art. Publications such as The Triumph of American Painting (1970) and later monographs on Lewis have gradually incorporated these artists, though gaps remain. Ongoing research continues to uncover archives, oral histories, and exhibition records that further illuminate their contributions.

Why Recognizing Black Abstract Artists Is Crucial Today

ReasonExplanation
Historical JusticeAcknowledging the work of Black abstract painters corrects a longstanding erasure from museum collections, textbooks, and critical discourse.
Cultural RepresentationVisibility affirms that Black creators have long been innovators in avant‑garde movements, challenging stereotypes that confine Black art to “folk” or “community” categories.
Pedagogical ValueIncluding these artists in curricula enriches students’ understanding of how form and content intersect across race, gender, and class.
Inspiration for Emerging ArtistsSeeing predecessors who navigated similar social pressures provides role models for younger Black artists seeking to work abstractly.
Broader Artistic DialogueRecognizing diverse voices expands the vocabulary of abstraction itself, fostering new hybrid practices that blend cultural motifs, technology, and experimental media.

How We Can Amplify Their Presence

  1. Curatorial Initiatives – Museums and galleries should program dedicated exhibitions, acquire works for permanent collections, and integrate Black abstract pieces into broader thematic shows.
  2. Digital Storytelling – Online archives, virtual tours, and social‑media campaigns (like Wisdom Born Designs’ PEA Black History Month series) can reach global audiences quickly and affordably.
  3. Scholarship & Publication – Funding for research, monographs, and conference panels ensures rigorous academic treatment.
  4. Community Partnerships – Collaborations with historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), cultural centers, and activist groups create grassroots momentum.
  5. Market Support – Collectors, auction houses, and art fairs should recognize the monetary and cultural value of Black abstract works, helping to sustain the artists’ estates and living creators.

Closing Thoughts

Black abstraction stands as a testament to the power of emotion‑first visual language. Artists like Norman Lewis turned away from literal depictions not because they denied reality, but because they believed that the feeling behind the image could reach farther, louder, and more universally. Their legacy reminds us that abstraction is not an escape from social responsibility; it is a different, equally potent, mode of protest and affirmation.

By continuing to research, exhibit, and talk about these pioneers, we honor their courage, enrich our cultural heritage, and open space for the next generation to imagine new ways of seeing – and feeling – the world.

Explore more of this narrative through Wisdom Born Designs’ ongoing PEA Black History Month campaign on Instagram @wisdombornnj29 – where each elemental post pairs a historic Black abstract work with a contemporary piece from our Primal Elemental Abstraction collection.

References

  1. Smithsonian American Art Museum – “Bonfire” (1962) analysis
  2. Wikipedia – Norman Lewis biography (mid‑1940s abstraction shift)
  3. Studio Museum in Harlem – Exhibition “Black Paintings, 1946‑1977” (1998)
  4. Wikipedia – Lewis’s own statements on aesthetic development and social impact

© 2026 Wisdom Born Consulting, LLC. All rights reserved.

How Alma Thomas Inspired the Birth of Primal Elemental Abstraction

By: Benu Ma’at

When we speak of abstract art as a language of freedom, few voices resonate as powerfully as Alma Thomas. Her vibrant color fields and rhythmic patterns transformed nature into a symphony of joy and transcendence. For me, her work was not just an influence – it was a catalyst for creating Primal Elemental Abstraction (PEA), a philosophy and method that seeks to channel the raw forces of creation through instinctive, organic expression.

Alma Thomas: A Legacy of Color and Rhythm

A black and white photo of a woman standing in front of abstract artwork, wearing a patterned dress and holding a handbag.

Alma Thomas broke barriers as an African American woman in the mid-20th century art world, redefining abstraction through her signature mosaic-like brushstrokes. Her paintings were inspired by gardens, sunlight, and the infinite beauty of nature. She believed that art should uplift the human spirit – a belief that echoes deeply in the foundation of PEA.

Thomas’s approach was rooted in harmony and repetition, using color as a universal language. Her work reminds us that abstraction is not chaos; it is order born from intuition, a dance between structure and spontaneity.

From Gardens to Elements: The Bridge to PEA

Where Alma Thomas found inspiration in the patterns of flowers and foliage, Primal Elemental Abstraction turns to the elemental forces – earth, water, fire, and air – as primal sources of energy. Both approaches share a reverence for nature, but PEA expands the dialogue into a cosmic dimension, exploring how these forces shape existence and identity.

PEA is not about rigid geometry or predictable repetition. It is about surrendering to instinct, allowing brushstrokes to mimic the flow of rivers, the surge of flames, the whisper of wind. In this way, PEA honors Thomas’s celebration of organic beauty while forging a new path toward elemental resonance.

A Continuum of Black Abstract Innovation

Alma Thomas opened doors for Black artists in abstraction, proving that cultural identity and modernist aesthetics can coexist. PEA continues this lineage, weaving Afrocentric and Afro-Futuristic narratives into its visual language. It is a reclamation of abstraction as a space for ancestral memory, spiritual depth, and cosmic imagination.

Why Alma Thomas Matters to PEA

Her work taught me that abstraction is not an escape – it is a return. A return to the essence of life, to the rhythms that pulse beneath the surface of reality. Alma Thomas showed that color can heal, that pattern can speak, and that art can be both deeply personal and universally resonant. PEA carries that torch forward, illuminating new realms where primal energy meets artistic freedom.

Explore the philosophy behind Primal Elemental Abstraction
👉 Read more on Wisdom Born Designs

© [2025] Wisdom Born Consulting, LLC. All rights reserved.

Primal Elemental Abstraction: A New Art Manifesto

By: Benu Ma’at

Self-portrait of a person wearing a black T-shirt featuring a colorful hummingbird design, standing in front of an abstract art piece.

The world of art is often divided into strict categories. There are realists and surrealists, impressionists and modernists. But sometimes, creativity demands a lane of its own. It requires a philosophy that breaks away from rigid structures and returns to the source of all expression. This is why I created the manifesto for Primal Elemental Abstraction.

This wasn’t just about defining a new visual style. It was about codifying a mindset. I needed a declaration that honors the raw, instinctive forces of creation while embracing the freedom of modern abstraction.

Returning to the Source

At its heart, Primal Elemental Abstraction is a return to origin. In a digital age where art can feel disconnected or overly curated, this philosophy seeks to reconnect us with the visceral urge to create. I wrote this manifesto to articulate a simple but powerful truth: Art is not a luxury; it is a primal necessity.

We often treat creativity as a hobby or a commercial product. But deep down, it is the language of our origins. It is how early humans made sense of the stars and the seasons. By formalizing this approach into a manifesto, I wanted to remind artists and viewers that every stroke begins with instinct. Before we worry about technique or trends, there is that spark – the primal urge to bring something new into existence.

The Elemental Framework

One of the main reasons for this manifesto was to establish a vocabulary for this style. I needed a way to talk about the energy within the work. The manifesto grounds this style in four elemental principles:

  • Earth: Stability, texture, and grounding forces.
  • Fire: Passion, transformation, and explosive energy.
  • Water: Flow, emotion, and adaptability.
  • Air: Movement, breath, and open space.

These aren’t just artistic themes; they are metaphors for the creative process itself. When we paint with “fire,” we are channeling transformation. When we utilize “water,” we are embracing the flow of emotion. The manifesto serves as a guide for using these elements not just as visual tools, but as emotional anchors.

A Dialogue Between Instinct and Intellect

A core reason for this manifesto was to bridge the gap between two often opposing forces: chaos and order.

Abstract art can sometimes feel chaotic to the viewer. Conversely, academic art can feel too rigid and intellectual. Primal Elemental Abstraction sits in the middle. It is a dialogue between instinct and intellect.

The manifesto outlines this balance. It encourages the “Intuitive Process,” where spontaneity meets deliberate refinement. I start with the raw, chaotic energy of creation (Instinct) and refine it through the lens of composition and balance (Intellect). This manifesto explains that structure is a tool, not a cage. It gives artists permission to be wild in their expression while maintaining a cohesive visual language.

The Guiding Principles

To ensure this philosophy wasn’t just abstract theory, the manifesto lays out specific guiding principles. These pillars support the entire movement:

  1. Return to Origin: Acknowledging that the urge to create precedes technique.
  2. Elemental Truths: Using earth, fire, water, and air as guides for form and color.
  3. Freedom Over Conformity: Rejecting rigid systems in favor of organic movement.
  4. Dialogue Between Forces: Balancing chaos and order.
  5. Creation as Evolution: Viewing abstraction as a return to essence, not an escape from reality.

By writing these down, my goal is to transform a personal artistic habit into a shared methodology. It allows others to step into this space and experiment with these same tools.

Fostering a Movement

Ultimately, the creation of this manifesto creates an invitation. Primal Elemental Abstraction is more than a solo endeavor; it is a movement.

I am inviting viewers to stop looking at art as a static object on a wall. Instead, I want them to engage with it as a living process. When you look at a piece created under this philosophy, you are seeing a frozen moment of energy – a snapshot of the dialogue between the artist and the elements.

This manifesto is the roadmap. It connects ancestral energy – that ancient human need to make a mark – with modern interpretation. It validates the feeling that art should be felt before it is understood.

I created the Primal Elemental Abstraction manifesto to give a voice to the unseen. It stands as a testament to the power of raw creativity and the enduring relevance of the elements that shape our world. Whether you are an artist looking to break free from rigid constraints or a viewer seeking deeper connection, this philosophy offers a path back to the source. It is time to let instinct lead the way.

© [2025] Wisdom Born Consulting, LLC. All rights reserved.

A Universe Where Story Meets Canvas: The Ledger and the Crown & Primal Elemental Abstraction

When I began writing The Ledger and the Crown: Book One – Where the Sky Began, I knew it would be more than a story. It would be a creative universe—a space where literature and visual art converge to explore themes of harmony, disruption, and elemental power.

The Philosophy Behind Primal Elemental Abstraction

Primal Elemental Abstraction (PEA) is my signature art approach, rooted in the raw forces that shape existence: Earth, Water, Fire, and Air. These elements are not depicted literally but expressed through bold strokes, layered textures, and dynamic contrasts. Each piece becomes a visual symphony of movement and tension, echoing the same principles that guide the narrative of The Ledger and the Crown.

Cosmic Echoes: A Reflection of Story and Element

A colorful artwork titled 'Cosmic Echoes II' featuring abstract shapes with earthy tones and bold lines, displayed on a wall alongside another piece titled 'Cosmic Rendition'.
Cosmic Echoes featured in the Planetary Realms Group Exhibition @ Brooklyn Art Cave September 2025

The Cosmic Echoes set from my PEA collection perfectly embodies this philosophy.

  • Earth emerges in grounded tones and structured forms, symbolizing stability.
  • Water flows through sweeping curves, representing adaptability and rhythm.
  • Fire ignites in vibrant choral, radiating energy and transformation.
  • Air cuts through with sharp, angular shapes, evoking freedom and expansion.

These visual elements mirror the saga’s central themes: the pursuit of balance, the inevitability of disruption, and the collective will to create harmony in a fractured universe.


Excerpt from Chapter One: The Sync and the Fracture

“The Unbroken Chord is more than a song. It is a collective act of will.”
Queen WisdomBorn’s voice carried through the Grand Concourse of Waystation Prime, where ten million souls gathered in anticipation. The Festival of the Dual Suns was meant to be a celebration of harmony—a ritual that aligned their civilization’s heartbeat with the Ledger’s eternal song.
But as her keynote soared into the vaulted chamber, a flaw emerged: a dissonant frequency, faint yet growing, threatening the foundation of their reality. In that moment, tradition offered no protocol. Perfect harmony was a myth. Leadership was improvisation.
And the countdown had begun: T-MINUS 24:00:00 until the Relay’s collapse.


Why This Connection Matters

Both the book and the artwork invite you to experience a dialogue between mediums. The story’s Afro-futuristic lens and nonviolent space opera aesthetic resonate with the abstract language of PEA, creating a multidimensional experience for readers and art lovers alike.


Coming Soon

📚 The Ledger and the Crown: Book One – Where the Sky Began
Chapter One Preview drops Kwanzaa 2025
🎨 Learn more about my Primal Elemental Abstraction Approach and explore my Abstract in Color: Voices on Canvas 2025 Collection including Cosmic Echoes and discover how art and narrative intertwine.

© [2025] Wisdom Born Consulting, LLC. All rights reserved.