UVA photography exhibit shatters stereotypes of Black Virginians during Jim Crow

“This exhibition is all about how Black folks not only survived, but how they, in some ways, morally and psychologically prospered during that time,” said UVA professor John Edwin Mason.

A collection of 10,000 stereotype-defying images documenting Black life in Central Virginia during the Jim Crow era will be showcased at the University of Virginia through September 2023.

“Visions of Progress: Portraits of Dignity, Style and Racial Uplift,” the exhibit featuring photographs by Charlottesville photographer Rufus Holsinger, includes over 600 self-portraits commissioned by Black Virginians during the turn of the 20th century, according to the today! 

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