DispatchFolder


Growing Up in Civil Rights Richmond: A Community Remembers


Jan 17 2019
Thru
May 10 2019
Joel and Lila Harnett Museum of Art

Growing Up in Civil Rights Richmond: A Community Remembers, a new exhibition organized by University of Richmond Museums, pairs oral histories with photographic portraits of 30 Richmond residents whose lives were altered by their experiences as children and youth during the civil rights movement.

Growing Up in Civil Rights Richmond will run January 18 to May 10 at the Joel and Lila Harnett Museum of Art at the University of Richmond’s Modlin Center for the Arts.

“This history is vital to the complex story of America, as well as to understanding many of the issues that continue to face our nation and our city today,” said Richard Waller, executive director of University Museums.

The exhibition showcases vibrant, large-scale portraits created by Richmond-based visual journalist Brian Palmer. Portraits are accompanied by excerpts from interviews conducted by Laura Browder, UR’s Tyler and Alice Haynes professor of American Studies, as she spoke with participants about their personal experiences.

“Full of fortitude, resilience, and conviction, their stories offer nuanced, often linked perspectives of a Jim Crow past, that contribute to a fuller, more faithful historical narrative of our city,” said Browder. “The exhibition underscores how critical it is for these stories to be recorded and shared.”

The entire project encompasses an exhibition, educational programs for the campus and greater Richmond communities, and a 105-page catalogue featuring the interviews, portraits, as well as essays by Browder; exhibition curator Ashley Kistler; Richmond-based public historian, author, and lecturer Elvatrice Belsches; and Richmond Times Dispatch columnist Michael Paul Williams.

“Despite its wide-ranging impact, civil rights history in Richmond has received far less attention than it merits,” said Kistler. “The exhibition catalogue will serve as a lasting document of the diverse voices and faces of this group of individuals who lived through and helped shape that era locally.”

The public is invited to attend an opening reception and preview exhibition at the Harnett Museum of Art, Modlin Center for the Arts, Jan.16, 7 p.m.

Growing Up in Civil Rights Richmond: A Community Remembers
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