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Art Museum discussion to examine contemporary issues through art

Confrontation at the Bridge

The Art Museum of WVU’s popular Art Up Close! Series returns Sept. 12, featuring Marjorie Fuller, director of the Center for Black Culture & Research. The program begins at 5:30 p.m. in the Museum Education Center Grand Hall and is free and open to the public.

Fuller will give a presentation on the print “Confrontation at the Bridge” by artist Jacob Lawrence, a New York artist who was one of the first artists trained in and by the African American community in Harlem. Lawrence was commissioned in 1976 to create prints to celebrate the United States' bicentennial and chose to depict the March 7, 1965, march in Selma, Alabama, on the Edmund Pettus Bridge where protestors objected to the denial of African Americans' right to vote. In the print, Lawrence symbolized the malicious attack by law enforcement by simply representing the oppressors by a vicious dog on the left side of the bridge. Due in part to this event, Congress and President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act later that year.

Fuller is a 25-year professional in the areas of diversity and Pan-African studies, and prior to coming to West Virginia University, she was a professor in the Department of Pan African Studies at Kent State University. She sits on the executive board of the National Association of Black Culture Centers, and is a past national representative of Black and Multicultural Professionals in International Education. Fuller is also a member of other national organizations such as National Association of Women Educators, and American Association of Blacks in Higher Education. She is currently completing her dissertation for her doctoral degree in higher education administration and leadership Studies.

For more information on the museum, visit artmuseum.wvu.edu.

Artwork: Jacob Lawrence's (1917-2000) Confrontation at the Bridge, 1947, screen print in colors, on Strathmore, was gifted to the Art Museum of WVU by Jennifer and Harvey Peyton.

Read more about the event on the College of Creative Arts website.