Spelman College Museum of Fine Art
Date: Thursday, October 3, 2024
Time: Doors 5:30 pm, Conversation begins 6:30 pm
Location: Spelman College Museum of Fine Art, Cosby Auditorium
Spelman College Museum of Fine Art will host artist Ming Smith for a conversation with Spelman’s Chair of Art & Visual Culture, Program Director of Photography, and artist Myra Greene. Whether you're a budding photographer, an art enthusiast, or just love a good story, this is your chance to get inspired. Visit the exhibition Ming Smith: Feeling the Future at the Spelman Museum before the conversation during extended hours, Thursday, October 3, 12:00 pm - 6:30 pm. This event is part of Atlanta Art Week presented in partnership with Atlanta Center for Photography.
Ming Smith: Feeling the Future is on view at the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art through December 7, 2024
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Harlem-based, Detroit-born, Ming Smith attended the famous Howard University, Washington, DC. Smith became a photographer when she was given a camera, and was the first female member to join Kamoinge Workshop, a collective of Black photographers in New York in the 1960s. Smith would go on to be the first Black woman photographer to be included in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art. Smith initially focused on black-and-white street photography, a format she describes as having the “capacity to catch a moment that would never ever return again, and do it justice.” She has often characterized her work as “celebrating the struggle, the survival and to find grace in it.” Many of Smith’s subjects are well-known Black cultural figures including Nina Simone, Grace Jones, and Alice Coltrane, who all lived in her Harlem neighborhood. Smith cites music, specifically jazz, as being a primary influence on her work. She also likens her work to the blues, saying, “in the art of photography, I’m dealing with light, I’m dealing with all these elements, getting that precise moment. Getting the feeling—to put it simply, these pieces are like the blues.”
As an artist, full recognition for Smith’s work only arrived recently in response to several high-profile exhibitions. She was included in The Museum of Modern Art’s 2010 landmark exhibition, Pictures by Women: A History of Modern Photography. She featured prominently in Working Together: The Photographers of the Kamoinge Workshop, organized by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (Richmond) and presented by the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York, New York) in 2020. Smith was more recently included in Soul of a Nation at Tate Modern in London, England (2017), which traveled to The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (2020). Smith’s work is included in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York, New York), Philadelphia Museum of Art, Detroit Institute of Arts, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (Richmond), the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York, New York), and the National Museum of African American History and Culture (Washington, D.C.).
About the exhibition:
Spelman College Museum of Fine Art presents Ming Smith: Feeling the Future (August 23 - December 7, 2024). The first solo exhibition of photographer Ming Smith in Atlanta and at an HBCU, this exhibition is a selection of the artist’s work from the 1970s to the present. Feeling the Future presents photographs that are in conversation with each other across time and space. The exhibition showcases Smith’s expansive use of lens-based media and features her street photography, figurative imagery, portraiture, and abstractions, plus new commissions in experimental film, sound, and installation. Drawn from the full complexity of Smith’s oeuvre, Feeling the Future places works from the artist’s five-decades of creation and the cultural movements she witnessed and participated in. Exploring themes such as Afrofuturism, Black cultural expression, representation, and social examination, the exhibition offers a glimpse into unperceived moments of life as captured by one of the most profoundly gifted artists of her generation.
Ming Smith: Feeling the Future is the first major career-spanning museum survey for Harlem-based artist Ming Smith, a pioneer of image-making. Smith, who is known for her improvisational and experimental approach to photography, uses light, shadow, and movement to create dynamic portraits of the Black experience and multidimensional expressions of everyday life.
Ming Smith: Feeling the Future is organized by Contemporary Arts Museum Houston and curated by James Bartlett. The exhibition was conceived by Janice Bond. The Spelman College Museum of Fine Art presentation is curated by Karen Comer Lowe. Ming Smith: Feeling the Future at the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art is made possible by the generous support of The Wish Foundation, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the Friends of the Spelman Museum.
ABOUT SPELMAN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF FINE ART
The Spelman College Museum of Fine Art is the only museum in the nation dedicated to art by and about women of the African diaspora. The museum is located on the campus of Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia. The Museum has encouraged intellectual growth and curiosity as a vital resource for the Spelman community, the Atlanta University Center, and the general public since it opened in 1996. The Spelman Museum presents exhibitions, public programs, and has a growing permanent collection of works of art. For more information, please visit museum.spelman.edu and @spelmanmuseum on social media.
ABOUT SPELMAN COLLEGE
Founded in 1881, Spelman College is a leading liberal arts college widely recognized as the global leader in the education of women of African descent. Located in Atlanta, the College’s picturesque campus is home to 2,300 students. Spelman is the country's leading producer of Black women who complete Ph.D.s in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). The College’s status is confirmed by the U.S. News & World Report, which ranked Spelman No. 39 among all liberal arts colleges, No. 19 for undergraduate teaching, No. 2 for social mobility among liberal arts colleges, and No. 1 for the 17th year among historically Black colleges and universities. Recent initiatives include a designation by the Department of Defense as a Center of Excellence for Minority Women in STEM, a Gender and Sexuality Studies Institute, the first endowed queer studies chair at an HBCU and a program to increase the number of Black women Ph.Ds. in economics. New majors and minors have been added, including documentary filmmaking and photography, data science, refugee studies and gaming. Collaborations have been also established with MIT’s Media Lab, the Broad Institute and the Army Research Lab for artificial intelligence and machine learning, among others.
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Hours of Operation:
Monday: closed
Tuesday: closed
Wednesday: 12-5pm
Thursday: 12-5pm
Friday: 12-5pm
Saturday: 12-5pm
Sunday: closed