Program in collaboration with the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund of the National Trust for Historic Preservation
Join us in the sanctuary of The First Church of Deliverance for a salon-style seminar on Black Modernism and the architectural modernity of Black American traditions with leading voices in architectural history, criticism and preservation.
This program is part of a larger series of national conversations curated by the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, dedicated to reflection and dialogue on the evolving definition of Black Modernism and the undervalued legacy of African American contributions to modernist architecture. Set within one of Chicago’s most iconic examples of Black sacred modernism, the event brings together leading voices in architectural history, criticism, and preservation.
The evening will feature presentations by Lee Bey, photographer, writer and lecturer whose work documents and interprets the built environment through the lens of race, politics and power, and Charles L. Davis II, African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund Fellow and Associate Professor of Architectural History and Criticism at the University of Texas at Austin, whose research explores the role of racial identity and race thinking in shaping architectural history and contemporary design culture. Following the presentations, a moderated conversation will be led by architect and cultural preservationist Brandon Bibby, Senior Preservation Architect for the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund and Manager of the Conserving Black Modernism initiative. The discussion will open space to collectively consider how Black Modernism continues to inform our understanding of identity, memory, and the built environment.