Another Crossing Exhibition: Artists Revisit the Mayflower Voyage
https://fullercraft.org/event/another-crossing-artists-revisit-the-mayflower-voyage/
In 2020, the Fuller Craft Museum presents Another Crossing: Artists Revisit the Mayflower Voyage, an exhibition recognizing the 400th anniversary of the Mayflower crossing and its significance to American and world history.
Developed in partnership with Fuller Craft Museum, Plymouth College of Art, and The Box (previously referred to as the Plymouth History Centre in Plymouth, England), Another Crossing brings together ten artists from the United States and Europe for a global, cross-cultural effort that examines a pivotal event in world history.
In 2018, guest curator Glenn Adamson selected ten artists to participate in the project with the charge that only 17th century technology and processes be used in the creation of the objects. To fuel and inspire the work development, the artists and project partners will participate in two research trips—the first to Plymouth, England in March 2019, followed by Plymouth, Massachusetts in April 2019. These immersive experiences will create a sense of communion amongst the artists while providing important scholarly and technical information to inform the development of the work.
These resulting artworks will illustrate exceptional technical skill, while also speaking to the social realities behind the material culture, and the examination of the Mayflower crossing through a contemporary lens. For some, the Mayflower voyage and subsequent settlement of Plymouth Colony is a treasured historical event, while for others, the colonization and treatment of the Wampanoag peoples illustrate imperialism and cultural ruin. Through Another Crossing, the artists will respond to this complex part of our history and its impact on our culture over the last four centuries.
Another Crossing: Artists Revisit the Mayflower Voyage is offered in conjunction with the initiatives of Plymouth 400 (https://plymouth400inc.org/), a nonprofit organization created to highlight the cultural impact of this 400-year anniversary through exhibitions, programming, and other relevant events.