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A Monument to Blackness offers an in-depth look at Black murals across the United States, from interior murals in the South to street murals predominantly in the North and West. It shows us how Black murals were-and remain-an integral but commonly overlooked artistic expression in the movement for Black liberation across the country. Focusing on works from 1930 to the present day, Hannah E. Jeffery demonstrates the elusive connection between Black politics, public art, memory, and space to show how murals created unprecedented interactive sites of Black imagination and empowerment within…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A Monument to Blacknessoffers an in-depth look at Black murals across the United States, from interior murals in the South to street murals predominantly in the North and West. It shows us how Black murals were-and remain-an integral but commonly overlooked artistic expression in the movement for Black liberation across the country. Focusing on works from 1930 to the present day, Hannah E. Jeffery demonstrates the elusive connection between Black politics, public art, memory, and space to show how murals created unprecedented interactive sites of Black imagination and empowerment within Black communities. Showcasing Black life, Black love, Black Power, and Black history and painting it onto buildings in the streets, muralists creatively transformed walls of isolated Black neighborhoods into spaces of education, ritual, performance, and commemoration. By tracing the genealogy of Black muralism throughout the movement for Black liberation, A Monument to Blackness uncovers how, why, and when murals became catalysts for inspiring community interaction, and it unearths a largely unwritten narrative of Black visual protest in the fight for twentieth- and twenty-first-century Black liberation.

Jeffery calls on original artist testimony, extensive archival research, and the fields of Black, visual, and American studies to underscore how walls in racially isolated Black communities became inspirational, imaginative, and subversive spaces for residents to protest against social, racial, and political oppression; contest geographical confinement; celebrate Blackness; and commemorate a Black history. Not only does A Monument to Blackness help deepen our understanding of the movement for Black liberation by uncovering an overlooked expression of Black community art, but it arrives at a moment in America's history when understanding the deeper roots of this powerful mural movement will help contextualize the current wave of murals sweeping across the nation in this age of Black Lives Matter.


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Autorenporträt
HANNAH E. JEFFERY is a senior researcher at a social policy research institute in Glasgow, Scotland. She recently completed a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. She has been the recipient of a Baird Fellowship at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery, and she recently won a BA/Leverhulme Small Grants award to create a digital archive to preserve Black Lives Matter murals around the world, titled Say Their Names: The Murals of Black Lives Matter. She also contributed to an exhibition of Frederick Douglass murals on display at the Boston Museum of African American History titled, Picturing Frederick Douglass: The Most Photographed American of the 19th Century.