This Opa-locka Exhibit Displays Over 60 Years Of African American History Through Photographs

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August 26, 2023
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Comprised of 41 snapshots, Flash Points is a solo exhibition featuring the work of iconic Civil Rights photographer Ernest C. Withers.

BIANCA MARCOF - STAFF WRITER • AUGUST 26, 2023

Martin Luther King, Jr., and Ralph Abernathy riding on the first desegregated bus, Montgomery, Alabama
Flash Points: The Photography of Ernest C. Withers. Photo courtesy of Ten North Group.

An exhibition bringing the work of revered Memphis-born photographer, Ernest C. Withers, to Miami is on view for one final week. Over 40 original photographs documenting six decades of African American history are currently on display at the The Arts and Recreation Center in Opa-locka, as part of “Flash Points: The Photography of Ernest C. Withers.”

Flash Points Exhibition View
Installation View of Flash Points at The ARC. Photo by Isabella Marie Garcia and Courtesy of the Ten North Art Foundation, Opa-locka, Florida.

Presented by Ten North Group, formerly Opa-Locka Community Development Corporation, the exhibit showcases a collection of moving snapshots from before, after and during the Civil Rights Movement in the South. Withers is often considered “the original Civil Rights photographer,” documenting and shaping the visual narrative of the era. Oftentimes, he was the only photographer to record these scenes since they were ignored by the mainstream press.

He formed personal and complex relationships with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Andrew Young and Mamie Till-Mobley, and his coverage of the Emmett Till murder trial brought national attention to the racist violence taking place during the 1950s in Mississippi, among other places.

Ernest C. Withers, Moses Wright points out the men who he saw take his nephew Emmett from his house, the last time Moses would see him before his murder.
Ernest C. Withers, Moses Wright points out the men who he saw take his nephew Emmett from his house, the last time Moses would see him before his murder. Sumner, Mississippi, ca. 1955, archival printed photograph, 22 1⁄2 x 22 1⁄2 inches (framed).

Photographs taken during the trial, as well as Dr. King and Rev. Ralph Abernathy riding on one of Montgomery’s first desegregated buses, and many musicians are on view.

Flash Points Exhibition View
Installation View of Flash Points at The ARC. Photo by Isabella Marie Garcia and Courtesy of the Ten North Art Foundation, Opa-locka, Florida.

Through the lens of Withers, Flash Points strives to educate and provide the opportunity to take locals on a visual journey through American history and the Black experience. It is curated in partnership with Withers’ daughter and founder of the Withers Collection Museum & Gallery of Memphis, Tennessee, Rosalind Withers.

Flash Points runs through August 31st at The ARC, located at 675 Ali Baba Ave, Opa-Locka, FL 33054. The gallery is open to the public. Learn more about it here.

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