Exhibit celebrates Black Panther Party in stories and portraits
Top image: Former Black Panther Party members Emory Douglas (left), Kathleen Cleaver (center) and Barbara Easley Cox (right). (Photos: Suzun Lucia Lamaina)
The documentary exhibit 鈥淩evolutionary Grain,鈥 open now through March 15 in the Macky Gallery, highlights the stories of former Black Panther Party members and ongoing struggles for racial justice
This spring, the 抖阴传媒在线 Center for African and African American Studies (CAAAS) and the Department of History, together with the Louis P. Singer Endowed Chair in Jewish History, present the traveling exhibition 鈥淩evolutionary Grain: Celebrating the Spirit of the Black Panther Party in Portraits and Stories鈥 in the Macky Gallery.
The exhibition, open now through March 15, was created by California-based artist and photographer and honors the legacy of one of the most influential movements in Black American history.
As part of Black History Month programming, the exhibition will be accompanied by a panel discussion with former Black Panther Party members Gayle Dickson, Aaron Dixon, Ericka Huggins and Billy X Jennings, alongside Lamaina and CAAAS Director Reiland Rabaka, on Thursday, Feb. 12, at 7 p.m. in the Norlin Library Center for Global British and Irish Studies Room (M549). The discussion will focus on the history and legacy of the Black Panther Party and its relevance in today鈥檚 political climate.
Hear firsthand accounts of the history of the Black Panther Party and the 1960s Black Freedom Struggle鈥攁long with their legacies in Trump's America. The program is听part of the accompanying events for the traveling exhibit "Revolutionary Grain: Celebrating the Spirit of the Black Panther Party in Portraits and Stories" that is on display through March 15 in the Macky Gallery.
听听What: A panel discussion with former Black Panther Party members Gayle Dickson, Aaron Dixon, Ericka Huggins and Billy X Jennings, alongside CAAAS Director Reiland Rabaka and photographer Suzun Lucia Lamaina.
听听When: 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12
听听Where: Norlin Library Center for Global British and Irish Studies Room (M549)
Additional programs featuring former Panthers will take place throughout that week on campus.
The 鈥淩evolutionary Grain鈥 exhibition features a social-documentary photographic essay of portraits and personal narratives from more than 50 former members of the Black Panther Party. Lamaina spent five years traveling across the United States to interview and photograph participants, offering them the opportunity to tell their own stories.
鈥淭his work is meant to spark conversation,鈥 Lamaina explained of the project, noting that the exhibition coincides with the 60th anniversary of the Black Panther Party鈥檚 founding and ongoing struggles for racial justice in the United States. The exhibition situates the movement鈥檚 history in what Lamaina describes as a new phase of the Black Freedom Struggle in contemporary America.
Founded in October 1966 in Oakland, California, by Bobby Seale and the late Huey P. Newton, the Black Panther Party initially focused on addressing police violence in Black communities. By the late 1960s, the party had become a national and international symbol of resistance, establishing nearly 50 chapters across the United States and an international presence in Algiers, North Africa.
鈥淧utting on the Black Panther uniform and committing our lives to the liberation struggle changed the purpose and meaning of our entire identities,鈥 Dixon wrote in his 2012 memoir My People Are Rising: Memoir of a Black Panther Party Captain. 鈥淚t was a liberating experience. Societal restriction and conformities dropped by the wayside, leaving a fearless, defiant, powerful human being. We no longer looked at ourselves in the same way, nor did we look at the system and its representatives in the same manner. We were the freest of the free.鈥
In addition to its revolutionary political stance against capitalism, imperialism and fascism, the party launched 鈥渟urvival programs鈥 that provided free breakfasts, medical services and other essential resources to thousands of Black Americans. Despite its community-based activism, the Panthers were frequently targeted by federal authorities, with the Nixon administration labeling the party 鈥渢he greatest danger to the internal security鈥 of the United States. A number of its members, among them Fred Hampton in Chicago, died at the hands of police officers.
The exhibition seeks to counter decades of misrepresentation by bringing first-person accounts from former members to the foreground, connecting their experiences to present-day debates over racism, police violence and political organizing.
鈥淎t a time during which the Trump administration and its supporters are rewriting history and representing versions of the past that downplay or even erase the critical significance of the Black Liberation Struggle of the 1960s and 1970s鈥of which the Panthers were an integral part鈥it is all the more important to shed light on the movement鈥檚 complexities and give our students, faculty and the community one more opportunity to engage with aging Panther members in meaningful ways," says Thomas Pegelow Kaplan, a professor of history and the Louis P. Singer Endowed Chair in Jewish History. "This is a university campus, and it is a celebration, but also a reappraisal, with the help of key actors, of a complex struggle that has also problematic chapters. History is messy, but our students deserve better than what many in Washington have in store for them.鈥
The exhibition is co-sponsored by the departments of English, Ethnic Studies and Women and Gender Studies and the Center for Humanities and the Arts.
All events are free and open to the public. No tickets are required. For more information, contact Thomas Pegelow Kaplan at thomas.pegelow-kaplan@colorado.edu.
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