Researcher, historian, curator, tour guide and interim director of the Louisiana Museum of African American History, Monique Moss is spearheading the collaborative research project entitled Black Square Narratives 1823-2023: A Bicentennial Activation of St Louis Cemetery No. 2. It is a multi-year, interdisciplinary undertaking of organizations, scholars and artists to revitalize, preserve and advocate for the sacred space of the Black Square, one of three city blocks in the St Louis Cemetery No. 2 in New Orleans that was the final resting place of Black people who fought to defeat slavery and oppression during the Haitian Revolution, the period of chattel enslavement, the Civil War, Reconstruction and the Civil Rights Movement. Using a process of civic engagement known as Kongolese Mbongi Circles, Moss initiates gatherings of a coalition of partners (the New Orleans Black Square Network which includes artists) who present individually researched historical and biographical content directly related to Black Square.
Monique Moss
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“It is an honor to be part of The Warhol Foundation’s mission to support the visual arts coupled with its commitment to specifically support the voices of women, POC, Native Americans, and LGBTQ. It is simply thrilling to be part of an organization where we get to see these values writ large and implement real change in real life ways in the visual arts community that still so needs to move forward in terms of social justice, equality, and diversity. We put our money where our mouth is. How many institutions actually do that?”
Deborah Kass, Artist