The Birmingham News, 1963

Description

The Birmingham News, 1963 refers to a seismic year in the civil rights movement. Countless instances of police brutality and arrests of black civil rights participants culminated in President John F. Kennedy’s deployment of federal troops to Birmingham, Alabama. The tense standoff made daily headlines nationwide, but, as the selected covers from April 3 to May 13 testify, the Birmingham News purposefully downplayed the violence against African Americans. Critically interrogating the deep-rooted interrelations between race and language, Bethany Collins transforms these covers into a site of intervention that memorializes events ignored by the Birmingham press. Collins embossed, darkened, and distressed the front pages, reviving the very histories they ignored through this process of alteration and erasure. Emblematic of her conceptual and text-based practice, The Birmingham News, 1963 demonstrates how authored and institutional texts are always politicized, even when they take on the guise of objective reporting.

Provenance

The artist; sold through Richard Gray Gallery, Chicago, and Patron Gallery, Chicago, to Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, San Francisco, later Reno, NV, Apr. 26, 2017 [invoices; copies in curatorial object file]; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, Dec. 31, 2024.

The Birmingham News, 1963

Bethany Collins

2017

Accession Number

243293

Medium

Twice-embossed archival newsprint

Dimensions

18 prints, each: 63.5 × 48.3 cm (25 × 19 in.)

Classification

newsprint

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida in honor of Gary and Denise Gardner