Exhibition

Georges Adéagbo: Create to Free Yourselves

President Lincoln’s Cottage, Washington, DC, United States
17 Jan 2023 - 15 Feb 2023

Photo by: Stephan Köhler. Courtesy of President Lincoln’s Cottage

Photo by: Stephan Köhler. Courtesy of President Lincoln’s Cottage

Award-winning artist Georges Adéagbo (born 1942 in Cotonou, Benin), known worldwide for his found-object installations, will be making a rare appearance in the US this winter. He will be exploring themes of freedom and bondage at President Lincoln’s Cottage, the home where Abraham Lincoln lived and developed the Emancipation Proclamation.

In vignettes throughout the Cottage comprising sculpture, craft assemblages, found objects, and handcrafted illustrations and signage, this month-long exhibition, Create to Free Yourselves: Abraham Lincoln and the History of Freeing Slaves in America, will honor Adéagbo’s lifelong interest in President Lincoln. Adéagbo described Lincoln as, “the man who above all cared about reforging the union, not by force and repression, but by the warmth of his feelings and the generosity of his heart.” Glimpses of this generous-hearted Lincoln will be on display alongside those of the shrewd politician. “Adéagbo is concerned with the relationship between the personal and the political, and President Lincoln’s Cottage is a rare place where Lincoln’s private and professional lives intersect. It is the perfect place to showcase his work,” said Mason.

Intercultural transfer will also be at the heart of the exhibit. The objects in the exhibition are prepared by a team of artists in Benin and will be assembled at President Lincoln’s Cottage. The objects are relational in nature, interacting with one another, with their creators in Benin, with Abraham Lincoln and the history of slavery, and with the historic structure itself. This intersection of relationships will be the fertile ground for Adéagbo’s unique messaging, and the process becomes an act of artistic self-liberation.

“Georges Adéagbo is one of the most significant artists alive today. We cannot wait to see his transformative visual storytelling at work at President Lincoln’s Cottage and are delighted to be a part of the project,” said Karen E. Milbourne, Senior Curator at the National Museum of African Art.

The installation process will begin in the New Year, following the anniversary of the day Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation took effect: January 1, 1863. Graduate students from Howard University’s Chadwick A. Boseman College of Fine Arts will be assisting Adéagbo with the installation. The exhibit will open January 17th and run through February 15th. Opportunities to meet the artist and see the installation in progress may be granted to the press upon request prior to opening.

 

lincolncottage.org

 


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