A rare collection of murals on African-American history will be on display starting this Saturday, running through October 13, at New York University’s NYU 80WSE Galleries. “Rising Up: Hale Woodruff’s Murals at Talladega College” will feature six large pieces from the late Woodruff, a Black printmaker, draftsman, painter and NYU professor.
“I think they are really important because they speak to the African-American experience in the United States, in the South; and Hale Woodruff is an amazing historian, so to speak, who humanized some of the realities of the past, of the history of the Black experience in this country,” said Eddie Mandhry, associate director of the Africa House at NYU, at the exhibition’s opening reception July 9. “Having these murals travel all the way from Talladega College is an exceptional opportunity to be able to have an audience with a piece of history. Hale Woodruff was at NYU, and this is a sort of homecoming.”
After undergoing a year-long restoration by the High Museum of Art in 2011, the works of art, which include colorful, cubist-influenced depictions of scenes like The Mutiny on the Amistad, The Trial of the Amistad Captives, The Repatriation of the Freed Captives, The Underground Railroad, The Building of Savery Library, and Opening Day at Talladega College, have been shown in Atlanta and Chicago.
Artist and NYU professor Lyle Ashton Harris noted how the pieces fit into the greater historical puzzle of New York City.
“Woodruff was a founding member of ‘Spiral,’ an African-American arts and civil rights movement established in this very city. He and several other prominent Black artists during the 1960s, in downtown Manhattan, sought to explore the role that art plays in the context of culture, race, politics and society,” he said. “His pieces tell the stories of racial struggle from protests against slavery, to Black Americans’ resilience and advancement since the end of the Civil War.”
Scores of arts aficionados, academics, community leaders, students and administrators turned out for the reception celebration last week in honor of the exhibition.