01/21/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/21/2025 11:59
Vanderbilt University will host an acclaimed multimedia art exhibit celebrating more than 100 years of influential Black writers-from the end of the Civil War through the Civil Rights era-at several campus locations this spring.
Dark Testament: A Century of Black Writers on Justice, which debuted in September 2022 at Chicago's American Writers Museum, will highlight 19 prominent authors, including Frederick Douglass, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston and Maya Angelou, with original portraitscreated for the exhibit by contemporary Black artists Dorothy Burge, Damon Reed, Dorian Sylvain and Bernard Williams. In addition, the Vanderbilt installation will feature five newly commissioned artworks by Nashville artists Omari Booker, Lakesha Calvin and Dayo Johnson, including a portrait of award-winning poet and Fisk University alumna Nikki Giovanni.
The exhibit will be on display at the Vanderbilt Museum of Art, the Jean and Alexander Heard Libraries' Central Library second-floor gallery, the Divinity Schooland the Bishop Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Centerbeginning Feb. 14, with a guided tour connecting these spaces. Vanderbilt's Office of the Vice Provost for Arts, Libraries and Global Engagementis organizing the campus exhibit, which is made possible by the American Writers Museum and generous support from The Efroymson Family Fund and Lilly Endowment Inc. through its Religion and Cultural Institutions Initiative.
Dark Testamentwas inspired by a poem of the same name written by Pauli Murray, a poet, civil rights activist, lawyer and the first African American woman ordained as an Episcopal priest. Murray is featured among the original set of exhibit portraits alongside other groundbreaking writers whose works have shaped American literature and social justice movements. Two of the newly commissioned portraits will depict unique versions of Murray created specifically for Vanderbilt Divinity School to reflect Murray's theological contributions and legacy.
"Vanderbilt University is honored to host this extraordinary exhibit, which puts some of our greatest writers in conversation with contemporary audiences and illuminates their historical impact through the dynamic medium of visual art," said Tracy Sharpley-Whiting, vice provost for arts, libraries and global engagement and Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Distinguished Professor of African American and Diaspora Studies and French. "The interactive elements of the Dark Testamentexhibit and the rich slate of programming we have planned will help bring these writers' vital stories to life."
Programming to support the Dark Testamentexhibit at Vanderbilt will include the following events:
Campus partners for the Dark Testamentexhibit and programming include the Bishop Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Center, the Department of African American and Diaspora Studiesand the Callie House Research Center in the College of Arts and Science, the Jean and Alexander Heard Libraries, Vanderbilt Divinity School and the Vanderbilt Museum of Art.
Dark Testament: A Century of Black Writers on Justicewill be on display at Vanderbilt through May 1, 2025. For more information, visit www.vanderbilt.edu/incunabula/dark-testament.