Background
Rozzell Sykes was born in Aberdeen, Mississippi, the son of Anna Bell Clay and Cleveland Sykes, although he gave various accounts of his origins over the years, frequently mentioning a childhood in the West Indies.
Rozzell Sykes was born in Aberdeen, Mississippi, the son of Anna Bell Clay and Cleveland Sykes, although he gave various accounts of his origins over the years, frequently mentioning a childhood in the West Indies.
He lived in Saint Louis, Missouri and San Diego, California before moving to Los Angeles in 1961. In the mid-1960s, Rozzell Sykes was a working painter, noted for a series featured in Life magazine. Saint Elmo Village was incorporated in 1971, and showcased the Sykes" vision of a colorful, multi-ethnic cultural space.
Rozzell Sykes executed several large murals for the community, and secured funding through the assistance of Tom Bradley, then a city councilman.
"I don"t think he allowed anything to go unpainted," said Bradley in 1995. "He was a man of uncommon vision.
He often said it didn"t matter whether you lived in a shoe box or a mansion, you can be all you want to be." The neighborhood became the site of the annual Saint Elmo Festival, organized by Rozzell Sykes to bring attention to the project and celebrate the arts He died in late 1994, age 63.
Saint Elmo Village remains active as an arts space, under director Roderick Sykes.
Quotations: "I don"t think he allowed anything to go unpainted,".