ringgold, 06:38 you can't necessarily change what's going on, no.ut, i can say what i think about it. i'm free tdo that. and i will. sixteen years later, she exploded black stereotypes, in a work called "who's afraid of aunt jemima". >> you turned her into a powerful woman. >> well, she was powerful in the way she was doing something with those pancakes and stuff that nobody else had done. >> at 91, faith ringgold is having a big moment: six decades of her art are on view in a retrospective exhibition at the 'new museum' in new york, titled "american people": paintings sculptures works on fabric and the 'story quilts' a mix of writing, painting, and quilting for which she is best known. across the hudson at her home in new jersey, we had a chance to visit the artist, on this day signing prints in her large and bright studio - surrounded by the tools of her trade, archives posters, and artworks. of her life's work, she says this: >> i wanted to make a contribution to amera. it's my country. i thought, 'i have something to say about the american peopl