Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art (Venue Partner)
756 N Milwaukee Ave
312.243.9088
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Ulysses Davis working outside his barber shop. Photo by Roland Freeman
Saturday Mar 13, 2010 (11am–12:30pm)
In conjunction with the exhibition The Treasure of Ulysses Davis, Quincy Mills, Assistant Professor of History at Vassar College, will give a presentation discussing the social and political culture of African American barber shops in the mid twentieth-century. Black barber shops have historically been places where commerce, culture and community intersect to inform African Americans' individual and collective freedom. The subject of Intuit’s exhibition, Ulysses Davis, cut hair and created sculptures inside his barber shop in Savannah, Georgia as an expression of his economic and artistic freedom. Barbering provided him the skill to maintain control of his economic life and the barber shop provided him the space to exercise his artistic creativity.
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