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A Never-Ending Story

The museum’s Permanent Exhibition will introduce visitors to Maryland’s African American heritage via three galleries and major content areas: THINGS HOLD, LINES CONNECT: African American Families and Communities in Maryland , BUILDING MARYLAND, BUILDING AMERICA: Labor and the Black Experience , and THE STRENGTH OF THE MIND: Black Art and Intellect . Each will tell the story of perseverance, triumph and the celebration of life through the inspiring history and living culture of Maryland’s African Americans.

After the Parade, (ca.1996), North Avenue Series
James E. Lewis Museum of Art, Morgan State University
Unknown Woman wearing straw hat

THINGS HOLD, LINES CONNECT:
African American Families and Communities in Maryland

Visitors will learn how 200 years of slavery wrenched and sometimes broke the bonds of family and community among African Americans in Maryland. Men, women and children were torn from their loved ones, isolated, and sold to strangers.

Yet Maryland’s African Americans continuously recreated and renewed these bonds of family and community in order to endure the centuries of brutality and decades of oppression and suppression that followed. Black Marylanders created tools for survival and self-determination, proving the power of their commitment to one another by building and sustaining families, communities of worship, neighborhoods, towns and social organizations.



Chesapeake Oystermen
Archives of the Peabody Institue of the Johns Hopkins University

BUILDING MARYLAND, BUILDING AMERICA: Labor and the Black Experience
For two centuries, Africans were brought to Maryland against their will and kept here by violence, forced to work on plantations and farms, in shops and kitchens and in iron forges and shipyards. Visitors to the museum will learn how this tragic history of slavery and oppression enriched the state and the nation, and how its vestiges harmed our entire society.

Despite the emotional and societal devastation of slavery and oppression, African Americans developed valuable trades through their native skills and exploited labor, which they employed in their struggle for opportunity, achievement and success.



Cab Calloway, Chick Webb
Photograph Credit: Archives of the Peabody Institute of
the Johns Hopkins University



THE STRENGTH OF THE MIND: Black Art and Intellect
African Americans poured the emotions of a displaced and disenfranchised people into painting, music, dance and language. The Art and Enlightenment Gallery tells the story of how Africans arriving in Maryland by slave ship carried with them ancient cultural traditions and skills in music, art, dance, sculpture, storytelling and literature.

In the centuries of racism that followed, African Americans used art as a way of enduring and even overcoming an oppressive society. From this struggle emerged unique and universal works of music, literature, dance and art. Like artists everywhere, African Americans used their craft to express a personal sense of beauty, to strive for excellence in performance and to forge a spiritual connection with their creator.

 

 

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