Mary Enoch Elizabeth Baxter: Epilogues of the Black Madonna, on view at The Print Center from January 23 to April 4, 2026, marks a significant homecoming for the Philadelphia-based artist. This exhibition extends Baxter’s acclaimed photographic series
Consecration to Mary into a richly layered installation that merges photography, sculpture, and devotional architecture. Drawing from Christian ritual objects, medieval Marian imagery, and early photographic practices, the exhibition transforms the gallery into a contemplative space where history, memory, and resistance converge.
At the heart of Baxter’s practice is a careful reckoning with the visual legacy of representation and power. Her work responds to 19th-century photographs by
Thomas Eakins that depict an unidentified Black girl, images now widely recognized as exploitative and deeply troubling. Baxter intervenes in this historical violence by inserting her own body into the frame, positioning herself as both witness and protector. Through this act, she reframes the narrative, rejecting the harmful mischaracterizations of Black girlhood that have long persisted in Western art and social structures.
The exhibition’s physical arrangement reinforces its conceptual intent. Daguerreotypes are displayed within prayer kneelers that double as vitrines, inviting viewers into a posture of reflection rather than passive observation. Nearby, large-scale self-portraits form a triptych reminiscent of medieval altarpieces, aligning personal testimony with sacred tradition. This blending of formats underscores Baxter’s interest in devotion as an ethical stance—one rooted in care, refusal, and endurance rather than sacrifice or martyrdom.
Grounded in Black feminist thought and transformative justice,
Epilogues of the Black Madonna proposes art-making as a practice of protection and repair. Baxter reimagines the Black Madonna not as a distant symbol, but as an active guardian whose presence challenges inherited narratives of harm. Through reverent gestures and deliberate reconfiguration of history, the exhibition opens space for collective healing, remembrance, and the reclamation of sanctity for Black girlhood.
Images:
Mary Enoch Elizabeth Baxter, Consecration to Mary, from the series of the same name, 2021-present, digital print on metallic paper in a velour, leather and metal frame © Mary Enoch Elizabeth Baxter