4/11/2022 COVID Update: The State of Maine no longer requires masking or proof of vaccination to attend any public events, but individual venues are free to do so. For the latest information, visit the Center for Disease Control and Prevention or the State of Maine’s COVID site.
- This event has passed.
Picturing Freedom: Pedro Tovookan Parris’s Autobiographical Landscape
October 13, 2016, 12:00 PM
FreeDirector of the New England Arts and Architecture Program Martha J. McNamara will discuss the 1856 autobiographical landscape drawn by Pedro Tovookan Parris currently on view in the exhibit A Usable Past: American Folk Art at the Museum of Art. Parris’s drawing tells the story of a harrowing journey from East Africa, where he was enslaved as a child, to Rio de Janeiro, Boston, and, ultimately, to the small western Maine town of Paris. By linking personal experience with political concerns in a single visual narrative, Tovookan’s imagery causes us to recognize the complex, traumatic legacy of slavery and to understand how it shaped his experiences as an African man living in a rural community in antebellum New England.