As an only child, Danielle N. Dixon kept herself busy with art projects growing up in the 鈥70s and 鈥80s.
鈥淚 just found that with art, I could kind of create my world the way I wanted it to be,鈥 Dixon said.
Growing up, she never stopped drawing and painting. Once she entered her high school years, she passed an audition to join the Cleveland School of the Arts in 1987.
鈥淪o that was a big deal,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淏ecause now we were focusing on the technical side of how to draw and getting the basics down, and not just kind of going for it by sight.鈥

Following her junior year at CSA, Dixon got a scholarship to attend a summer camp at Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan, an experience she described as a 鈥渃ultural explosion.鈥
Back in the classroom, however, she found she wasn鈥檛 connecting with the artists she was told to research throughout history.
鈥淚 think because they told me I had to, I rebelled against it even harder,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淧lus, the artists they were exposing me to, I just didn鈥檛 see anything I could get from that.鈥
In her early adult life, Dixon worked on developing her own, realistic style. But lately she鈥檚 been challenging herself to add more depth and meaning to her art. Most recently, she created art for the 2023 BLAX Museum, a showcase where local artists pay tribute to prominent figures in Black history. Dixon chose to highlight science-fiction author Octavia Butler.
鈥淚 got the idea, like Octavia was an Afrofuturist. What if I could put, like an orb of light in her hand, because part of her stories dealt with shaping worlds,鈥 Dixon said.

Though it鈥檚 been a challenge to stay on top of her artistic practices while working a full-time job outside of the arts, Dixon has also been devoting time to writing poetry, which she started learning in college at Kent State University.
鈥淚 started writing, but I didn鈥檛 share anything with people because I was thinking, 鈥楴obody wants to hear what I have to say,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淏ut I got so much warmth and encouragement, and you know, people wanting to hear more.鈥
In addition to performing with BLAX Museum for the past three years, Dixon has also been a featured poet at the Rialto Theatre in Akron for Angry Cow Poetry and has been on stages with Larchmere Arts, Cincinnati Poetry Slam and various locations across Cleveland.
鈥淚 found that by putting art as a priority, it鈥檚 opened some other doors for me,鈥 she said.
