This exhibition by the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives & Rare Book Library features three artists whose collections are housed at Emory – Benny Andrews, Flannery O’Connor, and Alice Walker, all of whom grew up in middle Georgia. “Crossroads” focuses on O’Connor’s short story, “Everything That Rises Must Converge,” which Andrews later illustrated. Walker also responded to O’Connor’s work through an essay, “Beyond the Peacock,” and a short story, “Convergence.”
Using rare archival photos, journals, letters, original manuscripts and artwork, and personal artifacts, "At the Crossroads” examines how Andrews, O’Connor and Walker overlap geographically as Georgia natives, chronologically during their lifetimes, and creatively through their work. It reflects on their divergent origins and paths, while acknowledging the accolades and controversies in their lives, and illustrates how these three artists in different ways continue to reflect their time and place.
Related Links
Read the Emory News story "Emory Libraries exhibition examines intersecting lives and work of Benny Andrews, Flannery O'Connor and Alice Walker"
Watch the video "At the Crossroads: A Conversation with the Curators"
Image credits, left to right: Benny Andrews, photo courtesy of SCAD and with permission of the Benny Andrews estate; Flannery O’Connor, photo courtesy of Ina Dillard Russell Library, Georgia College and State University; Alice Walker, photo by Rhoda Nathans, The New York Times.
The Emory Libraries welcome non-Emory affiliated researchers and visitors during visitor hours.
"Amid a groundswell of national attention to racial and social injustice, Emory professors and students joined with the Atlanta artist in the fall of 2020 to explore how creative thinking and artistic expression can inspire change. "
The Arts and Social Justice Fellows Program was envisioned as an opportunity for faculty members to work alongside partnered ASJ fellows to embed creative projects reflecting on social inequities into existing courses.
This exhibit provides a survey of the collaborations between those ASJ fellows and faculty with students. Components of the exhibit feature the work of Jim Alexander, renowned Atlanta photographer, and Hank Klibanoff, veteran journalist who directs the Georgia Civil Rights Cold Cases Project at Emory, along with other notable fellows and faculty working with students to translate their learning into creative activism in the name of social justice.
You are invited to an exhibit that celebrates the 20th annual iteration of the legendary Emory Jazz Festival and its residency at the Schwartz Center for Performing Arts.
The exhibit features media and photography from an array of Emory Jazz Fest concerts and events and includes personal papers and documents that trace the development of jazz at Emory.
The exhibit opens at 7:00 p.m. in the Chace Gallery on February 10, 2023 — the evening of the Emory Jazz Fest 2023 concert featuring Warren Wolf and the Emory Jazz Fest All-Stars. It will remain at the Schwartz Center through Saturday, February 11 then moves to the Woodruff Library.