A closer look at the artist whose work caught my eye.
| (Front cover of Jill Scott’s album To Whom This May Concern, featuring artwork by Marcellous Lovelace. Photo by Tamika Cody.) |
When my daughter surprised me with To Whom This May Concern on vinyl by Jill Scott, I was over the moon. For those of you who don’t know, Jill and I go way back. Her first album, Who Is Jill Scott? Words and Sounds Vol. 1 got me through an emotional divorce. Every album and collaboration since has taught me lessons about life, love, and what it means to be a grown-ass woman.
To Whom This May Concern landed in my lap on Feb. 13, 2026. Yes, my daughter thought ahead and made sure it arrived on the official release date. When I pulled the album out of its shipping box, the cover immediately caught my attention. The artwork is by Chicago artist Marcellous Lovelace, whose name appears in the lower right corner of the cover.
“This is what I miss about holding music in my hands,” I said to my daughter. “The artwork.”
In the digital age of music streaming services, with platforms like iTunes, Spotify, Tidal, and SoundCloud, people often miss out on that extra layer of a musician's creativity. The artwork that accompanies full albums tells a story.
(Back cover of Jill Scott’s album To Whom This May Concern. Photo by Tamika Cody.)
Curious about the artist, I wanted to learn more about Lovelace. During one of the podcasts Scott appeared on while promoting the album, I learned she discovered his work on Instagram. She slid into his DMs, and the rest is history. The piece she chose from Lovelace’s collection is titled "SHE IS BRAVE AND FREE.”
Who is Marcellous Lovelace?
Lovelace was born in Chicago and attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
His Instagram bio reads: “Art of Marcellous Lovelace created to teach self-love and awareness of original people never conforming to Colonialism.”
On the Saatchi Art website, Lovelace explains that his work is rooted in “escaping the worst situation possible.” A few clicks later led me to his personal website, where he describes himself as an “Afro Urban Indigenous Folk Artist (AFRICAN BLACKNESS LIBERATION).”
Lovelace paints in mixed media using found materials. His work draws heavily from personal experience, including growing up in Roseland on Chicago's South Side and witnessing life in economically marginalized communities across America.
“This segregated, poverty-stricken environment helped me to develop over 400 images a year over the last 30 years of my life,” he shared. “My environment is so negative it helps me to create beauty from this struggle. I paint because it’s the only thing that feels good after feeling like I’m trapped in a world that has no hope.”
He uses everything from old pieces of paper to garbage cans, tires, mattresses, and construction debris from torn-down buildings.
The tragedies that occurred in the city where he was raised helped him reinterpret oppression across a wide range of surfaces. His work also aligns with long-standing African artistic traditions where material carries spirit, history, and function.
“My surfaces absorb the trauma, endurance, and lived reality of Black life in America,” he writes in his bio.
His work is inspired by African American artists such as Thornton Dial, Lonnie Holley, Elizabeth Catlett, Noah Purifoy, and Betye Saar, who used discarded materials as historical evidence against erasure, poverty, and racial violence.
Such an inspiring artist. And knowing the story behind the artwork makes Jill Scott’s To Whom This May Concern feel even richer. The music tells one story. Lovelace's painting tells another. Together, they feel like the same conversation.
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