Mystery in Motion: African American Spirituality in Mardi Gras (original) (raw)
Mystery in Motion: African American Masking and Spirituality in Mardi Gras was a past exhibition at the Louisiana State Museum’s Presbytère on Jackson Square from February 13, 2021, through November 28, 2021. This online exhibition and virtual companion site introduces some of the sights, sounds, and stories that Mystery in Motion presented.
Guest curators Kim Vaz-Deville, PhD, and Ron Bechet of Xavier University of Louisiana explored spirituality in Mardi Gras through the presentation of more than two dozen Black masking Indian suits, carnival costumes, and masking objects produced in New Orleans, juxtaposed with extraordinary African artifacts that are representative of the cultures, religions, and artistry that influenced their creation. Many of the exceptional African objects were loaned from the collections of the Musée du Quai Branly–Jacques Chirac in Paris and the African Art Collections at Southern University at New Orleans.
This exhibition originated with oral histories conducted with New Orleans culture bearers immersed in Black masking traditions. You can watch these video oral histories in their entirety on the Xavier University website:
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The exhibition featured exceptional creations that are unique to New Orleans’s Mardi Gras but also have much broader social relevance. These mysteries in motion are “solved” when understood as sartorial sanctuaries that convey both spiritual and political liberation. In defiance of displacement, oppression, and fear of untimely death, these garments communicate ideas about justice, transformation, healing, sensuality, and protection from life’s wicked unknowns. African Americans created these powerful carnival traditions that offer a celebration of hope and renewal each year.
Additional Exhibition Resources (pdf)
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Mystery in Motion: African American Spirituality in Mardi Gras
Online Exhibition
Video courtesy of Lexcie Thomas. In order of appearance: Ausettua AmorAmenkum, Big Queen of the Washitaw Nation, Downtown Super Sunday, 2018; Shaka Zulu, Big Chief of the Golden Feather Hunters, Uptown Super Sunday, 2018; Dow Edwards, Big Chief of the Timbuktu Warriors, formerly Spy Boy of the Mohawk Hunters, Uptown Super Sunday, 2018; Ivan Watkins, Wild Man of the Yellow Pocahontas, Downtown Super Sunday, 2018; Tremé Million Dollar Baby Dolls with the Spirit of Fi Yi Yi and the Mandingo Warriors, Downtown Super Sunday, 2018.