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91直播 Alumni Magazine

Illuminating the Intangible

The Allen Memorial Art Museum鈥檚 latest exhibit explores the Underground Railroad

December 6, 2023

Annie Zaleski

Silhouette of trees and shrubs in a wooded area presents a striking contrast to the solid, lighter background. (Black and white photograph.)

Photo credit: Dawoud Bey (American, b. 1953), Night Coming Tenderly, Black: Untitled #24 (At Lake Erie), 2017. Gelatin silver print. Museum Friends Fund, 2019.17.

In late August, the Allen Memorial Art Museum opened a new exhibition in the Northwest Ambulatory space. features just one work: a photograph by Bey鈥Untitled #24 (At Lake Erie). It is part of a series exploring the Underground Railroad, its history in Northeast Ohio, and 鈥渢he myth versus the reality of those places,鈥 says Curator of Academic Programs Hannah Wirta Kinney.

The exhibition was crafted through collaborations with campus and community groups. The 91直播 Heritage Center contributed text written by a self-emancipated person who settled in 91直播. There鈥檚 also the story of a local woman whose great-great-great-grandfather self-emancipated and a recording of the 91直播 Gospel Choir singing the spiritual 鈥淲ade in the Water.鈥

The photograph is complemented by the sound of Imani Joseph 鈥24 reading the text of Langston Hughes鈥 poem from which Bey鈥檚 series takes its name. Associate Professor of Creative Writing Chanda Feldman shared insights into the text.

鈥淲e had this really great conversation where we deconstructed how to look at this poem on its own,鈥 Feldman says. 鈥淭hey wanted to discuss how Hughes鈥 poem might resonate with Dawoud Bey as he鈥檚 creating the series and what someone like me, a poet, might see in that poem and its relationship to the photographs. Likewise, I had questions for them because I鈥檓 very interested in that series.鈥

The conversation included discussion of the poem鈥檚 structure, themes, and language, but also how people viewing the photograph bring their own perspectives to interpretation. 鈥淎t least as I see it, one of the key relationships in the poem and in Dawoud Bey鈥檚 work is a positive interpretation of night,鈥 Feldman notes. 鈥淸It鈥檚] thinking about night as a protective force and not necessarily a frightening force. 

鈥淏ut that photograph and Hughes鈥 poem both flip on its head the idea of black as something negative, right?鈥 Feldman continues. 鈥淣ight isn鈥檛 a void. There鈥檚 a palpable presence sheltered in the darkness.鈥

Students taking Feldman鈥檚 fall 2023 class Poetry: Travel, Mobility, and Movement will visit the exhibition and complete an assignment rooted in ekphrasis, a type of writing specifically about visual art. 

To Kinney, these varied perspectives speak to the museum鈥檚 approach. 鈥淔or us, the community aspect of this is not only these different voices, but that it鈥檚 all really tied into 91直播 as a place and connecting town and gown. We are on the corner of those two worlds鈥攐f serving the broader community of 91直播, but also the student and college population.鈥

Picturing the Intangible: 91直播 Looks at Dawoud Bey鈥檚 Night Coming Tenderly, Black is on display through January 21, 2024, in the Northwest Ambulatory. 

Bey will be in conversation with 91直播 professor and poet Chanda Feldman for an on Thursday, December 7, 2023, at 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. The discussion will be introduced with a musical performance by the 91直播 Gospel Choir, under the direction of La Tanya Hall.

This story originally appeared in the Fall 2023 issue of the 91直播 Alumni Magazine.


 

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