02/20
Panel Conversation, The Legacy of Lynching: Artistic Confrontations of Racial Terror
Ken Gonzales-Day, W. Fitzhugh Brundage, Crystal Feimster, Jonathan Kubakundimana, with David W. Blight
Thursday, February 20, 2020, 5:00 pm
This panel conversation uses the Yale University Art Gallery exhibition Reckoning with “The Incident”: John Wilson’s Studies for a Lynching Mural as a springboard for discussing representations of lynching and other racial violence, past and present. Lynching was and remains a public spectacle meant to challenge social and economic progress among black people and other people of color and reinforce white-supremacist hierarchies. While many artists have opposed these grotesque acts of brutality using a variety of media, Wilson’s mural stands out for its size, the ephemerality of its form, and its representation of African American resistance and physical defense of their families. The panelists will discuss the role of the humanities and public art in grappling with this horrible aspect of U.S. history. Aesthetically, historically, and legally, how can we understand and confront legacies of racial terror in American life?
Panelists include W. Fitzhugh Brundage, the William Umstead Distinguished Professor, Department of History, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Crystal Feimster, Associate Professor of African American Studies, History, and American Studies, Yale University; Ken Gonzales-Day, interdisciplinary artist and the Fletcher Jones Chair in Art at Scripps College, Claremont, California; and Jonathan Kubakundimana, Program Manager, Equal Justice Initiative. The conversation is moderated by David W. Blight, Director, Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, and the Sterling Professor of American History, Yale University.
Presented in conjunction with the exhibition Reckoning with “The Incident”: John Wilson’s Studies for a Lynching Mural. Generously cosponsored by the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, the Yale Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration, and the Yale University Art Gallery’s Martin A. Ryerson Lectureship Fund.
CPTV and the Yale Film Study Center present a free screening of Jacqueline Olive’s Always in Season (2019; 92 mins.) as part of the Indie Lens Pop-Up Screening Series. This documentary centers on a teenager’s 2014 death in North Carolina and looks at the trauma of more than a century of lynching. The screening takes place Thursday, February 20, at 7:00 pm, in Yale’s Linsly-Chittenden Hall, 63 High Street, Room 102. Free and open to the public.
To learn more, visit https://bit.ly/2tKNLjM.
Open to:
General Public
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