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These Vibrant, Bigger-Than-Life Portraits Turn Gun Death Statistics Into Indelible Stories

PHILADELPHIA 鈥 Zarinah Lomax is an uncommon documentarian of our times. She has designed dresses from yellow crime-scene tape and styled jackets with hand-painted demands like 鈥溾 in purple, black, and gold script. Every few months, she hauls dozens of portraits of Philadelphians 鈥 vibrant, bold, bigger-than-life faces 鈥 to pop-up galleries to raise an alarm about gun violence in her hometown and America.

In a storage unit, Lomax has a thousand canvasses, she estimates, mostly of young people who died from gunfire, and others of the mothers, sisters, friends, and mourners left to ask why.

鈥淭he purpose is not to make people cry,鈥 said Lomax, a Philadelphia native who has traveled to New York, Atlanta, and Miami to collaborate on similar exhibitions on trauma. 鈥淚t is for families and for people who have gone through this to know that they are not forgotten.鈥

Each person 鈥渋s not a number. This is somebody鈥檚 child. Somebody鈥檚 son, somebody鈥檚 daughter who was working toward something,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he portraits are not just portraits. They are telling us what the consequences are for what鈥檚 happening in our cities.鈥

Firearms in 2020 became the for children and teens under 18 鈥 from both suicides and assaults 鈥 and fresh research on the public health crisis from Harvard Medical School鈥檚 Blavatnik Institute show how those losses with significant economic and psychological costs.

On June 25, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy declared gun violence a public health crisis, noting: 鈥淓very day that passes we lose more kids to gun violence. The more children who are witnessing episodes of gun violence, the more children who are shot and survive that are dealing with a lifetime of physical and mental health impacts.鈥

Philadelphia has recorded more than 9,000 fatal and nonfatal shootings since 2020, with about 80% of the victims identified as Black, according to . Among those injured or dead, about 60% were age 30 or younger.

Lomax has been a singular, and perhaps unlikely, force in making the statistics unforgettable. Since 2018, when a young friend poised to graduate from Penn State University was on a Sunday afternoon in Philadelphia, Lomax has set out to support healing among those who experience violence.

She launched a show on PhillyCAM, a community access media channel, to encourage people to talk about guns and opioids and grief. She organized fashion shows with local artists and families that focused on bearing witness to distress. She seized on portraiture, reaching out to local artists to memorialize the lives, not the deaths, of Philadelphia鈥檚 young. She began tracking shootings on social media, in news accounts, and sometimes by word of mouth. In 2022, City Hall to a remarkable exhibition of lost lives, organized by Lomax and created by .

She recently shared the portraits at a summit sponsored by the nonprofit and . The meeting offered guidance on enforcing regulations to prevent straw gun purchases that propel crime and provided data on weapon trafficking across state lines. Lomax knew the art, displayed along the stage, brought home the stakes.

Look at these faces, she said. These people had promise. What happened? What can be done?

There are two rows of colorfully painted portraits. The top row has four paintings and the bottom row has five.
Painted portraits commissioned by Zarinah Lomax. Each person 鈥渋s not a number. This is somebody鈥檚 child. Somebody鈥檚 son, somebody鈥檚 daughter who was working toward something,鈥 Lomax says. 鈥淭he portraits are not just portraits. They are telling us what the consequences are for what鈥檚 happening in our cities.鈥 (Christine Spolar for 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

Lomax, now 40, said the conversations she starts have purpose. Some paintings she gives to families. Others she stores for future exhibits.

鈥淭his is not what I set out to do in life,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen I was growing up, I thought I鈥檇 be a nurse. But I guess I am kind of nursing people this way.鈥

So far this year, Philadelphia has seen a drop in the number of murders, according to an online database by AH Datalytics, but ranks among the top five cities in murder count. Last year, the Harvard researchers established that communities and families are left vulnerable by gun injuries.

The 2023 study led by Zirui Song, an associate professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School, examined data related to newborns through age 19. The research documented a 鈥渕assive鈥 economic toll, with health care spending increasing by an average of $35,000 for survivors in the year after a shooting, and life-altering mental health challenges.

Survivors of shootings and their caregivers, whether dealing with physical injuries or generalized fear, often struggle with 鈥渓ong-lasting, invisible injuries, including psychological and substance-use disorders,鈥 according to Song, who is also a general internist at Massachusetts General Hospital. His study found that parents of injured children experienced a 30% increase in psychiatric disorders compared with parents whose children did not sustain gunshot injuries.

, who paints with acrylics, has been helping Lomax since 2021. Like all the artists, she鈥檚 paid by Lomax. She has , always after sitting down with the subject鈥檚 family. 鈥淚 get a backstory so I can incorporate that in the portrait,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ometimes we cry. Sometimes we pray. Sometimes we try to uplift each other. It is hard to do.鈥

鈥淚 hope one day I would not have to paint another portrait,鈥 said Norwood, a mother of five children. 鈥淭he idea that Zarinah has had so many exhibits, with numerous people who have died, is scary and heartbreaking.鈥

, a self-taught digital artist, was among those who wanted to help to 鈥渉onor and to offer a better look at who these people were.鈥 Doughty, a city employee who works at a courthouse, may be best known within Philadelphia for a series of fanciful murals in which he has grouped famous natives such as Will Smith, Grace Kelly, and Kevin Hart.

He has produced about 150 portraits on his iPad and laptop, working with Lomax鈥檚 nonprofit group, The Apologues, to best match a face with a phrase, embedded in the scene, that telegraphs the lost potential of youth.

鈥淎t the beginning it was hard to do,鈥 said Doughty, who works from family photographs. 鈥淚 look and I think: They are kids. Just kids.鈥

One time, he received a text from Lomax seeking a portrait of a rapper he recognized from art and music shows. Another day, he opened an email to find a photo of a man he knew from high school. In May, Doughty his work process for a portrait of Derrick Gant, a rapper with the stage name Phat Geez, who was . The killing happened a few weeks after the rapper a music video referring to an Instagram account that promotes anti-violence efforts in the city.

Doughty, 33, who grew up in the Nicetown section of north Philadelphia, wryly noted: 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 so nice.鈥 Lomax鈥檚 exhibitions, he said, allow families, even neighborhoods, to sort through sorrow and pain.

鈥淚 went to the last one and a mother came up and said, 鈥楧id you draw my child鈥檚 portrait?鈥 She just fell into my arms, crying. It was such a moment,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd a reminder on why we do what we do.鈥

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