Allison was born in
Los Angeles, California in 1987. She was a
MacDowell Fellow in 2019. She was also a 2020
United States Artists fellow. Often described as the
Rodney King riots, Allison sought to restore the memory of Harlins’ life and death and her significance. At the time, security camera footage of Harlins' death was broadcast widely on television news, but Allison's work does not include it. Instead, Jude Dry wrote in
IndieWire, the 19-minute film is "bursting with sun-kissed sidewalks and faded basketball courts, clean line animation and radiant Black girls posed gracefully, like young queens."
Alice Walker and
Saidiya Hartman were influences in Allison’s approach to creating a missing archive. The film premiered at the
Tribeca Film Festival and screened at the 2020
Sundance Film Festival. and the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary Short at
AFI Fest.
Ava DuVernay programmed the documentary as part of Array 360, and it was then picked up by
Netflix. The film was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject).
Other work In the 2021 Sundance Film Festival, Allison was part of a Sundance New Frontiers collective piece,
Traveling the Interstitium with Octavia Butler, from five Black artists who used web-based
extended reality (WebXR) to create
Afrofuturist work. The audio on the 2D film features two Black women discussing what they have been through, on a loop: in
Filmmaker Magazine Randy Astle describes the work as “cyclic, ‘starting’ again where it leaves off[...] illustrating the recurring pattern of Black women forging their identities in whatever new context confronts them.” Astle felt these New Frontier works were the most successful part of the festival, held remotely due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. which engages the mythology of
flying Africans. The myth stemmed from a revolt and then mass suicide by enslaved Africans at
Igbo Landing as they refused to submit to slavery; the myth of flying Africans began as the story that this revolt instead ended with the Africans taking flight and returning home. Allison has created both video work and still self-portraits in which flight “represent[s] black mobility toward liberation,” she wrote in
The New Yorker. ==References==