Art exhibit commemorates attack on Freedom Riders |
montgomeryadvertiser.com

One of the most violent moments of the civil rights era occurred in
Montgomery 50 years ago and today Alaba­ma State University is
un­veiling a series of artistic de­pictions of what happened on May 20,
1961.

On that day, civil rights ac­tivists dubbed "Freedom Riders," were
attacked at Montgomery's Greyhound Bus Station where angry whites
assaulted them with baseball bats, chains, fists and whatever else they
could get their hands on.

Local authorities were vir­tually non-existent during the attack, and
the activists were saved from further beatings by Alabama Public Safety
Director Floyd Mann who withdrew his gun and waded into the mob until
the violence stopped.

Books have been written and documentaries have been shown on television
about the incident, but ASU is presenting something unique today -- an
artistic look at what occurred at the bus station half a century ago.

Presented by the National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and
African-Ameri­can Culture, the paintings will have their debut this
af­ternoon from 3 to 5 p.m. at the facility at 1345 Carter Hill Road.
The exhibit con­tinues through May 31.

The exhibition, titled: "No Crystal Stair: A Climb to Freedom," features
works by Arthur Bacon, Ricky Callo­way, Marcella Muhammad, Lee Ransaw
and Charlotte Riley-Webb.

Presented in vivid colors, the paintings depict the vio­lence, the anger
and the sor­row that resulted from a sem­inal moment in America's civil
rights movement.

"The pieces in the exhibit honor the gallant contribu­tors to
African-Americans' struggle for freedom by the Freedom Rides and by
others who sought to force the na­tion to live up to its creed of
justice and equality for all re­gardless of race," ASU spokesman Ken
Mullinax said.

ASU graduate student Ro­lundus Rice, who is helping to promote the
exhibit, said Saturday afternoon that it is one of several events that
will be presented during the 50th anniversary of the bus station
violence.

"These artists present a vivid, clear voice to what happened that day,"
he said. "It further galvanized public support for the movement, and we
are pleased to invite the public to join us."
(2 of 2)
The riders were testing federal edicts prohibiting segregated bus
seating and services in the South. The beatings they took woke the
nation to incidents that only grew worse as the 1960s pro­gressed.

Assassinations of civil rights leaders including Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. and Medgar Evers and the mur­ders of three civil rights ac­tivists
in Alabama and Mis­sissippi led to arrests of Ku Klux Klansmen who were
re­sponsible.

"I vividly remember the tumultuous times that led to the riots during
the '60s, the demand for equality and leg­islative changes that many
take for granted today," said Riley-Webb, who plans to be at the exhibit
today.

After years of delays, the Greyhound Bus Station where the violence
occurred is slowly being turned into a museum at 210 S. Court St.

A panel depicting various aspects of the incident at the bus station was
unveiled a few years ago and work is continuing on the interior.

The building is owned by the U.S. General Services Administration while
the Alabama Historical Com­mission has the lease and is working with
local groups to help commemorate the event.

--
http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/article/20110213/NEWS01/102130337/Art-exhibit-commemorates-attack-on-Freedom-Riders%3E
Via InstaFetch

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.

Reply via email to