Polo Silk 2025 MLK Club Detour 2, on view from December 11 to February 7, 2026, brings together a vibrant selection of photographs by New Orleans–based artist Selwhyn Sthaddeus Terrell, widely known as Polo Silk. Drawn from images made inside the legendary nightclub Club Detour 2 during the mid-1990s, the exhibition revives the exuberant spirit of a formative moment in the city’s cultural history. These photographs pulse with the energy of a so-called “Golden Era,” when music, fashion, and community converged in spaces built for collective release and self-invention.
Rooted in the visual language of family albums and fashion magazines, Polo Silk’s photography occupies a space between personal memory and cultural documentation. Friends, relatives, musicians, and regular club-goers step confidently before the camera, adorned in Adidas tracksuits, Polo Ralph Lauren ensembles, Coogi sweaters, football jerseys, and polished loafers. Style operates as both armor and expression, signaling belonging, aspiration, and pride. The images reveal a community acutely aware of its own visibility, using dress and posture to claim presence and individuality within a shared social scene.
Club Detour 2 emerges as more than a nightclub; it is portrayed as a crossroads where generations, neighborhoods, and creative forces intersected. Airbrushed backdrops referencing hip-hop lyrics, current events, and local iconography frame the subjects, offering a theatrical stage for personal myth-making. Within these scenes, future stars of New Orleans’ music landscape appear alongside neighborhood legends, capturing a moment before broader recognition, when talent circulated freely within the room itself.
The exhibition also underscores the profound archival value of Polo Silk’s work. Having survived the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, these photographs now hold added significance, often serving as the only surviving images of individuals lost to time and circumstance. Polo’s ongoing practice of gifting framed portraits back to families transforms photography into an act of care, remembrance, and reciprocity. In this presentation, the images resonate as both historical record and living memory, honoring nights once lived intensely and now carried forward through photographs that continue to bind a community together.
Image:
Polo Silk, BUCKJUMP TIME, c. 1995. Chromogenic print © Polo Silk