Black history is American history at the Museum of the American Revolution
“Every day is Black History Month,” Michael Idriss, the manager of the African American Interpretive Program at the Museum of the American Revolution, said. “For this month, we try to highlight some programs specifically, pulling them out of our core galleries.”
The museum unveiled a new exhibition, “The Declaration’s Journey,” last October in anticipation of the semiquincentennial. Idriss said that many individuals throughout history have been connected to the declaration “through their work or embodying it in the content they’re creating.” The exhibit, which took more than five years to develop, aims to highlight those connections.
“Being able to have space for this special exhibition and being able to help connect stories … helps to show that there was a foundation from the very beginning that was looking at this founding document and trying to find where their story lies within that framework,” Idriss said.
The museum will host the next edition of its Read the Revolution Speaker Series on Wednesday, Feb. 25, discussing the connections between the Declaration of Independence and the Haitian Revolution.
The Free Library takes lifelong learning back to Philadelphia’s roots
The Free Library of Philadelphia has tied its Black History Month programming to its broader mission of “lifelong learning,” chief of adult services and programs Veronica Britto said. This year’s programming revolves around the theme “Our Roots Reach Further: 1776 to Tomorrow” to align with the America 250 celebrations.
“[It’s] saying, as African Americans in Philadelphia [and] in the United States, we connect back to 1776 … we honor all of that history, that family togetherness, that drive that made Philadelphia as great as it is today,” Britto said. “We look to our young people to continue on that legacy.”
The Free Library’s year-round programming includes Hyperlocal Heritage, ongoing events in neighborhood libraries that help local African Americans “dig into their genealogy” using the library’s resources, Britto said. The library also offers free courses on digitizing family records and photographs, as well as access to historical Black newspapers and the archives of The Philadelphia Tribune.
“Our director often says the library is the people’s university,” Britto said. “We’re making information and entertainment and community-building accessible to all people so that no one feels like they are alone.”
Examining the ‘Black imagination’ expressed through art and film
AAMP’s current special exhibition, “Ruth E. Carter: Afrofuturism in Costume Design,” highlights the inspiration Carter has drawn from both Afrofuturism and American history in her award-winning design career, which includes work on films like “Black Panther” and “Malcolm X.” The museum has built its Black History Month programming around the display, which runs through September.
The museum is also hosting a screening of the 1988 Keenen Ivory Wayans comedy “I’m Gonna Git You Sucka” — which Carter worked on — on Saturday, Feb. 21, in partnership with the Philadelphia Film Society, and is celebrating “Everyday Freedom Heroes” with a kid-friendly costume event on Sunday, Feb. 22.
Curator Michael Wilson said that the Carter exhibition allows visitors to not only better understand her design process, but also see how “her movies and her artistic practice may inspire youth through the characters.”
The exhibit helps the museum fulfill its mission statement by examining “the Black imagination and the way you can activate the imagination through costume design,” he added.
“[You can] also look at African arts, African American art, history and culture, and the way that it’s influenced within film,” he said. “Even though [Black Panther] is talking about a mythical Wakanda … when you look at Ruth Carter’s costume design, you see how she’s pulling from specific African culture.”
Meanwhile, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, February serves as a spotlight on programming that continues throughout the year. Year-round Black Art, Black Voices tours help school groups and members of the public “explore the multiplicity of narratives that Black artists share,” deputy director Audrey Hudson said.
“We’re civic partners to this city, [and] we want to be enmeshed in everything that goes on in this city,” Hudson said. She added that the Brind Center for African and African Diasporic Art, first established in 2023, will open a permanent gallery home for African art later this year.