05/29/2026
From the academy into practice. A next progression for recent MHP public history graduate students who are able to bring their academic research to a public audience. Keandres Dyson, Maya Henry, and Jessica Brooks are kicking off an exhibition of their capstone projects at the Sun ATL on June 19th from 2pm - 5pm. The exhibit will feature a talk from each curator and a screening of Maya's documentary Sexy in Sepia: Black Burlesque, Sexuality, and Socialization in Media and Performance.
The exhibit is titled Self-fashioning Sacred Selves and focuses on artwork and histories of Black artists, communities, and families. The exhibit breaks down into three sub-exhibits titled “Sexy in Sepia”, “Her Lens, Her Voice”, and “Anchored in History”. Each exhibit focuses on the way Black artists and communities create their own identities through movement arts, visual arts, and storytelling. The ethos of the project follows the second principle of the Nguzo Saba, Kujichagulia or self-determination in which Black people craft our own selves for us, by us. The exhibit includes burlesque pieces such as gloves, feather fans, headpieces, and pasties, oral histories, family objects, photography, and an original documentary.