By Terrie S. Rouse-Rosario and James E. Williams, 1401 N. 3rd St. Harrisburg, and is a story born in the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi. The three-month exhibition will explore how modern art and social justice converged at a historically Black college that gained national attention in 1963 when an integrated group of students and faculty from Tougaloo College participated in the lunch counter sit-in at Woolworth’s in downtown Jackson.
Located north of Jackson, Tougaloo College also drew the attention of the modern art world. As Civil Rights protests swirled across fiercely segregated Mississippi, a group of New York activists, curators, and critics—working in concert with a Tougaloo professor of art—organized the donation of exceptional works of art to the College, including works by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and George Grosz.
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