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North Side Skull and Bone Gang: “You Next!”

Video Series

Bruce Sunpie Barnes, big chief of the North Side Skull and Bone Gang, describes a Mardi Gras Black masking tradition.

By Xiomara Blanco, media producer

June 30, 2022

Black masking traditions are often about honoring ancestors, reclaiming power in a world of oppression, and creating beautiful expressions of joy, grief, and strength. In addition to Mardi Gras Indians, Baby Dolls, and the North Side Skull and Bone Gang carry on the traditions of Black masking in the neighborhoods of New Orleans.

Skeletons are part of the transatlantic culture of the African diaspora, with representations in West African rituals, Caribbean Vodou practices, and Latin American Day of the Dead celebrations. For two centuries, the North Side Skull and Bone Gang has signaled the start of Mardi Gras Day, waking the spirits and serving as a reminder to live well before death.

Starting before dawn, they don skeleton suits, butcher aprons, and papier-mâché skulls to walk the streets of Tremé (a local neighborhood adjacent to the French Quarter), wielding bloody bones and rousing their neighbors with calls of “You next!”

Bruce Sunpie Barnes, Big Chief of the North Side Skull and Bone Gang, created a suit for the exhibition Making Mardi Gras, currently on view on an extended summertime run through August 7, 2022, at the Historic New Orleans Collection. Displayed with a suit is a series of videos that explain the history of the gang, detail the making of the suit, and explore the changing nature of the historic Tremé neighborhood, the setting for the gang’s Fat Tuesday route.

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