May 24 2022
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Jun 30 2022
The Colored Museum: Past/Present/Future Exhibition

The Colored Museum: Past/Present/Future Exhibition

Presented by The Umbrella Arts Center at The Umbrella Arts Center

In a bold new exhibition at The Umbrella Arts Center in Concord, noted artist and curator Cedric Vise1 Douglas has found inspiration in a provocative work of theater, George C. Wolfe's satirical play, The Colored Museum, to create a visual journey of the Black Past, Present and Future.

Offering a diverse array of media, styles and audience engagement experiences, The Colored Museum: Past/Present/Future features work by 10 emerging and established Black artists from throughout the eastern U.S. including Thomas "Kwest" Burns, Barrington Edwards, Ifé Franklin, Nettrice Gaskins, Shea Justice, Chaz Maviyane-Davies, Keith Morris Washington and Douglas himself. Also included is work by the late outsider artist, Justin Printice Douglass, created through The Umbrella's education outreach program while incarcerated in Concord, and originally unable to be publicly exhibited due to COVID.

Free and open to the public the exhibition echoes, responds to, and challenges themes of the play, produced May 20 - June 5 by The Umbrella's professional stage company, directed by Pascale Florestal. Wolfe's play undermines Black stereotypes over time, and challenges notions of museums and white spectatorship of Black experience, through employing incisive and often hilarious satire.

Inspired by the play and conversations with Florestal, Douglas selected these artists not only on their strengths as artists, scholars and public speakers, but as activists whose combined work represent a call to action for audiences to personally promote social change and dismantling of racism in their communities. The organizing framework creates dialogue among the Past, from slavery, the civil rights and back to Africa movements; the Present demands for personal and political change in the wake of George Floyd; and Afrofuturist projections of race, technology, and Black bodies viewed through positive lenses. The exhibition also features an audience interaction component that allows visitors to leave messages, have conversations in regard to race relations, and reimagine museums and cultural institutions themselves.

COLLABORATORS TALKBACK
June 5 immediately following the closing performance of the play, exhibition curator Cedric Vise1 Douglas and theater director Pascale Florestal will be joined by journalist Jacquinn Sinclair for a talkback on art, race, and their collboration exploring themes in The Colored Museum.

Admission Info

FREE Admission to Gallery

Additional time info:

WALKING TOUR SUNDAYS
Go deeper into Concord's Black history! The Concord Visitor Center, The Robbins House and The Umbrella Arts Center have teamed up for a special “June Journeys” edition of the Town's expert-guided African-American History of Concord Walking Tour before visit the exhibition and seeing the play and visiting the gallery. Reserve in advance when booking tickets to The Colored Museum play Sunday May 29 or June 5. Tours meet at The Umbrella 1:00PM.

Dates & Times

2022/05/24 - 2022/06/30

Location Info

The Umbrella Arts Center

40 Stow Street, Concord, MA 01742

Parking Info

PARKING

Free parking is usually readily available in municipal parking lots adjacent to building and directly across Stow Street (not normally shown on Google maps), as well as on most surrounding streets. See a map of ADA parking and entrances around The Umbrella here.

TRANSPORTATION

The Umbrella is in Concord Center, easily accessible from the Walden exit of Route 2. The Umbrella is also 2 block walk (about 0.4 mi., 7 minutes) from the Fitchburg Commuter Rail Concord Station stop at 90 Thoreau Street.