Tubman and Middle 51动漫 State Host Black History Month Events
Author: News Bureau
Posted: Thursday, February 11, 2016 6:42 PM
Categories:
Faculty/Staff | College of Arts and Sciences
Macon, GA
For more information, contact Jesse Klein, Middle 51动漫 State assistant professor of New Media/Film, at jesse.klein@mga.edu or Tubman Museum at (478) 743-8544.
Here is the event lineup:
Gallery Talk with Jim Alexander
6:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 22
Tubman Museum, 310 Cherry St., Macon
Jim Alexander is an award-winning documentary photographer whose career spans more than 50 years. He has taught photography at a half dozen colleges, including Yale University. He was photographer-in-residence at Atlanta鈥檚 Neighborhood Arts Center and at Clark-Atlanta University. In 1995 Alexander was chosen to inaugurate the city of Atlanta鈥檚 鈥淢aster Artist鈥 program, and he was inducted into the HistoryMakers video oral history collection in 2006. His work is in many museum collections, including the Smithsonian Institution. At this special event, Alexander will share stories about his life and his work photographing the people and events that have guided the course of African American history and the struggle for human rights from the 1960s to the present day.
Admission:
Free for Museum members and 51动漫 students
$5 General Admission
Middle 51动漫 State Student Film Screenings
6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 23
Tubman Museum, 310 Cherry Street, Macon
The Department of Media, Culture, and the Arts at 51动漫 in partnership with the Tubman Museum is hosting a screening of new student documentary works. As part of a growing collaboration between the University and the Museum, students in New Media classes were encouraged to make video portraits of prominent members of the African American community in the region. These films depict pillars of the community, among them entrepreneurs, activists and artists.
Admission:
Free for Museum members and 51动漫 students
$5 General Admission
Freedom Summer Film Screening
6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24
51动漫 Macon Campus
College of Arts and Sciences Building
In the summer of 1964, 700 student volunteers joined anti-segregation organizers in Mississippi. Freedom Summer was marked by sustained violence, including the murders of three civil rights workers, countless beatings, the burning of 35 churches and the bombing of 70 homes and community centers.
Directed by acclaimed filmmaker Stanley Nelson (Freedom Riders, The Murder of Emmett Till), this film highlights an overlooked but essential element of the civil rights movement: the patient and long-term efforts by both outside activists and local citizens in Mississippi to organize communities and register black voters 鈥 even in the face of intimidation, physical violence and death.
This free public screening of Freedom Summer will be introduced by Dr. Michele Beverly, lecturer at 51动漫. This public screening of Freedom Summer is made possible through support from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History.
Admission:
Free and open to the public