Birmingham Public Library
2100 Park Place
Birmingham, Alabama 35203
http://www.bplonline.org
Exhibits
 

2013

The Art of Art Bacon, Artist and Activist
May 16-June 21

Art BaconArt Bacon is known by many as an artist, educator, and scientist. However, art has always been his passion. He was born in West Palm Beach but lived in several places in and outside of Florida. Recognized early for his artistic talent, he won many prizes and awards long before he graduated from high school. Now retired from Talladega College where he was named Professor Emeritus of Natural Sciences and Humanities, he is painting more than ever and occasionally writes and recites poetry. 

People are Bacon’s subjects of choice especially older and neglected people whose experiences show in their faces. In the early days, he worked almost exclusively with ink washes and lines—very little color. He was a minimalist and believed that color interfered with his expression of feelings. Bacon now uses more color and acrylics and a number of other media and techniques, often combining several. However, he still likes lines and his palette is still limited. A leading art critic describes Bacon’s work as “social commentary with a bold vitality.” Works by Bacon can be found in many private collections including those owned by Bill Cosby, U.S. Congressman John Lewis, and Hank Thomas. Institutions owning pieces by the artist include Alabama State University, Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, Mobile Museum of Art, Heritage Hall Museum, University of Maryland, Comer Museum, and Opryland. He has been featured in Southern Living and Lakeside magazines, Black Art in America, an online journal, and other publications. 


Artist website: http://www.artbaconartist.com/

Reception: Sunday, May 19, 3-5 p.m., The Gallery



Fusion: Sculpture by Jamey Grimes and Charles Clary
June 24-August 2
Artist websites: http://www.jameygrimes.com/, http://charlesclary.wordpress.com/

Paintings by Sky Shineman
August 12-September 20
Reception: Saturday, August 17

Watercolor Society of Alabama Annual Showcase
September 23-October 31
Reception: Sunday, September 29

Exhibit curated by Dr. William Colvin
November 4-December 27
Reception: Saturday, November 9, 3 p.m.

2013

Afri-Spiritus Sembler: Diasporic Art Work
The Paintings of Mero'e Rei

April 2-May 10

The exhibit is located in the 4th Floor Gallery of the Central Library during regular business hours.

Mero’e Rei had an interest in art from an early age and began producing works of art as a teenager. His love for jazz, blues and gospel serves as the inspiration for many of his pieces. His interest in African cave and rock art has inspired his later works. Rei has shown extensively in both solo and group exhibitions.

 

Rei is a native of the southern region of Alabama near Mobile. He graduated from high school in Birmingham, Alabama then attended the University of Alabama where he studied ceramics, sculpture, and print-making. He later received his B.A. at the State University of New York. Rei retired from the Office of Personnel Management of the United States Federal Government. He also served in the United States Navy as a medical corpsman. He gave many years as a clergyman in the Alabama West Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church. In his spare time, he studied art in galleries and museums in Spain and the Middle East.

 

Artist Statement: “My art is a visual study of Jazz music (expressions of life) inspired by the African spiritual diaspora transmuted with connection to ancient and modern elders. These inclinations are visualized in intrinsic colors, organic forms and spontaneous rhythmic patterns, utilizing fresco and a mixture of mediums as ebbing tides and flowing waves of colors emanating from my life force and internal representations. My style of work contains Color Field, Gestural and Lyrical Abstract Expressions.”

Visit the artist’s website for more information: www.meroerei.com

To purchase prints of the artist’s paintings, go to: 2-meroe-rei.fineartamerica.com.


Reception: Saturday, April 6, 3-5 p.m., The Gallery

 

Unseen...Unforgotten: Civil Rights Photographs from The Birmingham News
February 2 - March 28

The exhibit is located in the 4th Floor Gallery of the Central Library during regular business hours.

This exhibit features 41 pictures that capture the suspense, drama, tension, struggle and triumph of the civil rights movement in Birmingham during the 1950s and 1960s. Photographers with The Birmingham News took the photos, which highlight freedom riders, sit-ins, the Children's Crusade of 1963, the impact of the bombing of Sixteenth Street Baptist Church and more. Courageous leaders such as the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and others are featured in the exhibit. "You may have seen some of these photos in the past but the detailed captions next to each photo help you understand the full story and the achievements of the Birmingham movement,'' said Marjorie White, president of the Birmingham Historical Society. The Birmingham Historical Society organized the exhibition.

Event

Opening Reception February 2, 2013, 2:00-4:00 p.m., The Gallery

Press

"Unseen...Unforgotten photo exhibit installed at the Birmingham Public Library (slideshow and video)" The Birmingham News 28 January 2012   

2012

Attorney Shores' Scrapbook- The Life and Times of Birmingham's Civil Rights Lawyer and Civic Leader, 1939-1975
November 4 - December 28

The exhibit is located in the 4th Floor Gallery of the Central Library during regular business hours.

 Birmingham News photo of Arthur Shores
From left, Autherine Lucy, Thurgood Marshall and Arthur Shores, exit the federal courthouse in Birmingham, Ala. in February 1956, following Lucy's reinstatement as the first black person to be admitted to the University of Alabama.
Photo credit: Courtesy of The Birmingham News
.
 
The Birmingham Historical Society and the Birmingham Public Library are showcasing the life and times of Birmingham civil rights attorney Arthur Shores in a special exhibit. The exhibit features a scrapbook of newspaper reports and printed materials, which Shores collected throughout his legal and political career.

The Birmingham Historical Society has copied numerous pages of the scrapbook, which is larger than the size of a newspaper, in order to display them in the downtown library's fourth floor gallery. Shores, who was born in 1904, was a high school principal at Dunbar High School in Bessemer, Ala. when he became a lawyer in 1937. Although Shores died in 1996 at the age of 92, the scrapbook and exhibit look at his career from 1939 to 1975.

Some of the exhibit highlights include:

  • How Shores and Thurgood Marshall successfully fought to get Autherine Lucy enrolled as the first black student at the University of Alabama in 1956
  • How Shores became the first black person to sit on the Birmingham City Council in 1968
  • How Shores fought to strike down a Birmingham zoning law, which determined which side of Center Street black people could live. (Black people could not live on the west side of the street. The zoning law was struck down in 1946. Once people started moving to the west side of the street, their homes were bombed. Shores moved his family to an east corner of Center Street in 1953.)
  • How Shores' Birmingham home, which was located in an area that was known as "Dynamite Hill" because of so many racist bombings, was bombed twice in 1963 because racists thought he was involved in an effort to integrate Birmingham schools that year
  • Ads, telegrams and memorabilia from Shores' career
Event
Opening Reception
November 4, 3:00-5:00 p.m., The Gallery
Remarks 3:30 p.m.

Shores' daughters, Helen Shores Lee and Barbara Sylvia Shores, have written a book about their father. During the Nov. 4 opening reception, they will sign copies of The Gentle Giant of Dynamite Hill - The Untold Story of Arthur D. Shores and His Family's Fight for Civil Rights. They wrote the book with Denise George. Helen Shores Lee is a Jefferson County circuit judge and Barbara Sylvia Shores is director of the Jefferson County Office of Senior Citizens Services. Both say they are humbled that an exhibit features their father, who fought for voting rights, housing issues, educational opportunities and more. "I'm sure if he were here, he'd be very pleased that there is a recognition of his work,'' says Helen Shores Lee.

Press and Publications

Interview of Arthur Shores' daughters, Helen Shores Lee and Barbara Sylvia Shores discussing their father and the scrapbook. Credit: Bernard Troncale.

Interview by Bernard Troncale of Arthur Shores' daughters


Gallery Guide and Timeline

"Civil rights attorney Arthur Shores' life told by daughters in new book" Birmingham News article.
 

Watercolor Society of Alabama, September 17 - October 28

Both Sides of the Lens: Photographs by the Shackelford Family, Fayette County, Alabama (1900-1935) July 23-September 14

In the early twentieth century, posing for a photographic portrait was an event -it was an opportunity for people to make meaningful visual statements about themselves, their families, and their communities. Those living in Fayette County, Alabama, and the surrounding area did not need to travel to a photo studio to have their picture taken. Instead, they could simply visit the Shackelford family. Mitch and Geneva Shackelford, along with their children, were multi-talented African American artists who played a central role in the rural Fayette County community of Covin. Though farming was their primary vocation, the Shackelfords were also commercial photographers who left behind a collection of more than 850 glass-plate negatives that are now preserved in the Birmingham Public Library Archives.

The Shackelfords photographed local residents and visiting travelers, taking pictures of individuals, families, school groups, and civic organizations. In an era when demeaning and stereotypical depictions of blacks were prevalent in the United States, the Shackelfords provided African Americans with a vehicle for self-representation. The Shackelford photographs offer a dynamic and rarely seen depiction of the African American experience in rural Alabama and show black people living full and vibrant lives in the face of the racial and socioeconomic oppression of the Jim Crow era. This exhibition offers a glimpse into life on both sides of the lens, telling the story of these remarkable photographers and those who stepped in front of their camera.
 
Events
Opening lecture and reception featuring Dr. Psyche Williams-Forson
July 24, 6:30 p.m., Arrington Auditorium

Curator Andrew Nelson and Shackelford decendent Annie Shackelford Gallery Talk
July 26, 12:00 p.m., 4th Floor Gallery of the Central Library

Press and Publications
Brochure (pdf)
Poster
(pdf)
Press Release

Eudora Welty—Exposures and Reflections, June 5, 2012 - July 20, 2012
Four Decades: Photography from the University of Montevallo, April 17-May 25
Simpler Times: The Paintings of Maurice Cook, February 28 -April 13
The African American History Makers Quilt Exhibition, January 3-February 24


Page Last Modified: 5/14/2013 1:22 PM