press release

List Projects: Civil Disobedience
July 18–October 29, 2017
MIT List Visual Arts Center

"Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced."
—James Baldwin

Social and political movements are born out of the urgent desire to make abstract principles concrete. Public demonstration is one way to voice opposition to a government’s actions believed to be unjust, illegitimate, or unconstitutional. In the streets and on college campuses, in town halls, churches and prisons, civil disobedience has long been a tool of activism. Whether taking the form of mass occupation or individual statement, political protest is ingrained in American culture.

List Projects: Civil Disobedience is a program of documentaries, news footage, citizen journalism, and artist’s films and videos focusing on moments of political resistance and public demonstration from the early 20th century through today. Presenting records ranging from Great Depression-era hunger strikes and the historic Civil Rights movement to recent Black Lives Matter actions and Women’s Marches, this exhibition recognizes the history of resistance and considers the role that artists and documentarians play in chronicling and confronting abuses of power and social injustice.

The exhibition includes the work of filmmakers Madeline Anderson, Gregg Bordowitz, Jem Cohen, Storm de Hirsch, Ja’Tovia Gary, Kevin Jerome Everson and Claudrena N. Harold, Barbara Hammer, Leonard M. Henny, Richard Leacock, Tara Mateik, and Patricia Silva; collaborative work by video collectives Meerkat Media Collective, Paper Tiger Television, the Workers Film and Photo League, and Videofreex; content from long-running television series Firing Line, and media outlets such as the Associated Press, C-SPAN, Democracy Now!, PBS NewsHour, and Third World Newsreel. All films are screened daily in the Bakalar Gallery. Here is the daily screening schedule.

Organized by Henriette Huldisch, Curator, and Yuri Stone, Assistant Curator, MIT List Visual Arts Center.

A selection of the films and videos included in this exhibition are courtesy of the Associated Press Archives, Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI), The Film-Makers’ Cooperative, the Hoover Institution Archives, Icarus Films, MIT Museum, MoMA Circulating Film & Video Library, Picture Palace Pictures, and Video Data Bank.