Each of the ten artists in the exhibition offers a unique perspective on the fickleness of time. For his series The Birmingham Project (2012), the photographer Dawoud Bey employs the diptych format, which is frequently used to conjure the passage of time by pairing before and after moments. The series is a response to the 1963 white supremacist bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. Four girls were killed when the church was dynamited one morning, and two boys died in the aftermath. Bey juxtaposes photographs of two residents of Birmingham—one the same age as a child who was murdered that day and one who is forty-nine years older, the age the child would have been had they survived—to show the aging process and allude to its violent disruption. In 1964, when Bey was only eleven, photographs in a book dedicated to the Birmingham bombing were seared into his memory. He began his Birmingham portraits in 2012, when the shooting of Trayvon Martin, a Black teenager from Miami Gardens, Florida, made him question if progress had occurred for Black youth in this country and reflect that “the past doesn’t stay in the past.” Bey hopes these diptychs will create a momentary connection between viewers and his Black sitters to direct attention to the perpetuation of racial inequities.
The loss of Black lives and the epidemic of racism in the United States became entangled with other grief and trauma in the summer of 2020 as COVID-19 ravaged the country.
The exhibitions and programs at Art on Hulfish and Art@Bainbridge are made possible by Annette Merle-Smith; Princeton University; William S. Fisher, Class of 1979, and Sakurako Fisher; J. Bryan King, Class of 1993; Rachelle Belfer Malkin, Class of 1986, and Anthony E. Malkin; the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, a partner agency of the National Endowment for the Arts; the Humanities Council; the Lewis Center for the Arts; the Program in African Studies; the Department of African American Studies; the Center for Collaborative History; and other generous benefactors.