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Color Pictures
Power to the People, The Committee to Defend the Panther 21, Photo-silkscreen on paper, 1970, Collection of Civil Rights Archive, Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture, University of Maryland Baltimore County

Color Pictures

The first exhibition to explore the role played by visual images in shaping, influencing, and transforming the fight for civil rights in the United States, Color Pictures explores a myriad of images in multiple formats and sensibilities and in various contexts.
Road to Freedom
Taylor Washington Arrested at Leb's Delicatessen, Atlanta, Georgia, Danny Lyon, American, born 1942, Gelatin silver print, 1964, High Museum of Art, copyright Danny Lyon

Road to Freedom

Photographs of the Civil Rights Movement, 1956 - 1968

The photographs of the civil rights movement constitute the deepest and broadest photographic documentation of any social struggle in American history. Like freedom songs, photographs were integral to the movement, encapsulating feelings and strategies, furthering solidarity, and spreading knowledge.
The Scurlock Studio and Black Washington
Picnic group, Highland Beach, Maryland, 1931, Image courtesy of the Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution

The Scurlock Studio and Black Washington

Picturing the Promise

Photographs representing nearly a century's worth of creative output from the renowned Scurlock Studio form the backbone of a new exhibition designed to celebrate the legacy of a noted family of photographers and to present a vivid portrait of black Washington, D.C., in all its guises-its challenges and its victories, its dignity and its determination.