A young museum visitor works on a yard sign at Our Walls: Real and Imagined
Sarah Cahill performs beside a projected image of Re-Echo.
Museum visitors look at Hughie Lee Smith Our Walls
Through its partnership with Art Bridges, the , in Tampa Bay, Florida sought to engage local and diverse communities by highlighting artworks by artists who have been historically underrepresented in museums. By borrowing five paintings from the Art Bridges collection, the MFA St. Petersburg aimed to expand upon traditional art historical narratives and deepen conversations on race, gender, and regional identity by featuring works by BIPOC, LGBTQ+, and women artists.
With their Learning & Engagement project, the museum built programs and experiences that encouraged dialogue about social inequities and marginalization in the 20th and 21st centuries. They accomplished this, in part, by creating an in-gallery audio offering, .
With this interpretive feature, visitors enjoyed voice actors read archival materials from Lee-Smith, Krasner, Lawrence, Lewis, and Hartley.
The recorded performances played alongside each artwork, breathing new life into the lived experiences of the featured artists.
Audio selections included:
This immersive element deepened visitor experience by encouraging slow looking and listening.
An educator from the museum reflected: “Visitor engagement with the recordings was often coupled with delight, and docents reporting seeing visitors routinely pulling friends and family over to share the experience.”
This interdisciplinary exploration continued with Spiral Full Circle, a multi-genre evening of performances honoring the legacy of Spiral, a collective of Black artists, including Norman Lewis, formed in the mid-1960s. Focusing their mission on balancing activism with one’s artistic practice, these artists sought ways to engage with the Civil Rights Movement while negotiating individual aesthetic choices.
The group’s ethos inspired performing artist and author Tenea D. Johnson’s speculative fiction, actor Cranstan Cumberbatch’s performance, and musician Butch Thomas’ Lewis-inspired musical suite. Through this program, the museum introduced the vital but often overlooked contributions of the Spiral Group and supported Black artists' outputs.
We love that this innovative, multilayered project has transformed how artist and community perspectives are reflected at the MFA St. Petersburg. The museum’s programming suite successfully amplified the contributions of the local community and encouraged audiences to connect and empathize with artists and their contributions in new ways.