Garden & Gun

The Southern Agenda

HOLIDAY

A Brand-New Krewe

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA

As a young girl growing up four blocks from New Orleans’ St. Charles Avenue, Zenia Smith had no idea the whole world didn’t celebrate Mardi Gras; she didn’t know then that even a dozen miles away in New Orleans East, streets weren’t loud with merrymaking. When she moved there as an adult, she realized she had the experience to bring the revelry of her childhood to her new neighborhood—she had worked as a float lieutenant, had marched in marching bands, reigned as queen of a parade once, and even worked the security detail as part of her job as a sergeant in the New Orleans Police Department. So in 2018, Smith founded the Krewe of Nefertiti, an all-female, community-service-oriented krewe, and this year decided to roll a parade—with two hundred riders on twenty floats—down Lake Forest and Read Boulevards in New Orleans East on February 9, bringing Mardi Gras to a neighborhood that hasn’t seen its own parade in three decades. The krewe takes its name from the Egyptian queen of antiquity who, according to hieroglyphics, was seen as equal to her husband, the pharaoh Akhenaten. (It’s thought that she may have even ruled as pharaoh after his death.) “So many women love Mardi Gras,” Smith says. “I want every little girl to see this parade of strong women living their dreams.” Throughout Mardi Gras season, Nefertiti krewe members, or Jewels, as Smith calls them, work with organizations such as the Beautiful Foundation, Girls on the Run, and the local mentorship program the Pink House. “There’s a whole lot of pride in New Orleans and this neighborhood in particular,” she says. “Everyone deserves a little piece of Mardi Gras.”

kreweofnefertiti.org

ART

Alabama

WONDER AS YOU WANDER

The Alabama artist Butch Anthony loves bones. “I’ve just always liked fossils, I guess,” he says in a gentle Mister Rogers drawl. Finding a sixty-five-million-year-old dinosaur bone in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Garden & Gun

Garden & Gun1 min read
Chase Quinn
Question everything has long been Chase Quinn’s motto. He remembers his family sitting around the television, his grandparents lobbing coverage critiques at the nightly news. He later worked at the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York; and th
Garden & Gun2 min read
THE WELCOMING COMMITTEE Benjamin Deaton and Anna Scott K. Masten
While New York and Los Angeles have long been the epicenters of the contemporary American art trade, Atlanta is making a strong case for joining that list. One combined force shifting attentions south: Benjamin Deaton and Anna Scott K. Masten, who, j
Garden & Gun3 min read
The Tao of “Woo!”
Spring has sprung and the grass has riz, which means it’s bachelorette party season—the time when brides-to-be join forces with their besties to storm the streets in matching pastel outfits, feather boas, and tiaras increasingly askance as the night

Related