One Collins C. Diboll Circle, City Park
Dawoud Bey: Elegy brings together three powerful photographic series—
Stony the Road (2023),
In This Here Place (2019), and
Night Coming Tenderly, Black (2017)—to explore how the landscapes of Virginia, Louisiana, and Ohio continue to hold the echoes of America’s past. Through these deeply reflective works, Bey reconsiders sites marked by slavery and resistance, transforming them into spaces where memory, imagination, and history converge. The exhibition also features two films,
Evergreen (2019) and
350,000 (2023), expanding the dialogue between still and moving images while delving into the emotional resonance of these charged locations.
In
Stony the Road, Bey retraces the steps of more than 350,000 enslaved Africans who were forced to march to holding pens in Richmond, Virginia. The accompanying film, created with cinematographer Bron Moyi and choreographer Dr. E. Gaynelle Sherrod, reimagines this passage through a haunting visual and sonic meditation. With
In This Here Place, the artist turns his lens to former plantations near New Orleans, focusing on architecture and land as silent witnesses to human suffering and endurance. The film
Evergreen, paired with this series, heightens the emotional atmosphere through the voice and music of composer Imani Uzuri.
The third series,
Night Coming Tenderly, Black, evokes the perilous journey of those who sought freedom along the Underground Railroad. Bey’s black-and-white prints are enveloped in deep tonal shadows, allowing viewers to sense both the fear and hope of that nocturnal passage. Across all three bodies of work, Bey’s art becomes a meditation on presence—how the earth itself remembers.
Dawoud Bey: Elegy asks us to confront the enduring legacies of slavery and to recognize the landscapes of the American South and North as living vessels of collective memory.
Image: Untitled (Tangled Branches)
2023
Dawoud Bey (American, born 1953)
Gelatin silver print
Image: 44 x 55 in., Paper: 48 x 59 in.
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Gift of Mrs. Alfred duPont, by exchange, 2020.168.4. © Dawoud Bey