July
22
2019

An Exhibit & Conversation: The Beauty of Front Porch Citizenship


Indianapolis, IN
July 22, 2019, 05:30 PM-07:30 PM Eastern Time
Posted by: Katie

The Indiana Leadership Council of The Policy Circle is partnering with the Sagamore Institute to promote an exhibition of original manuscripts and art interpreting the manuscripts dedicated to exploring the theme of citizenship. The Sagamore Institute has curated a selection of original manuscripts from The Remnant Trust collection, and local artists from the Harrison Center in Indianapolis will respond to, and interpret the themes of the texts in different media. These will highlight different experiences of citizenship in both Indiana’s and America’s history.

The Indiana Leadership Council is hosting a reception and conversation at the exhibit located at the Harrison Center on MondayJuly 22, 2019 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. The event is open to all Indiana Policy Circle members, connectors and stakeholders. The evening will begin with an overview of the exhibit followed by discussions on citizenship. Please RSVP by registering at this link, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/a…. Additional details will be sent prior to the event.

We’re a country founded on ideals of human dignity and equality and we hope this exhibit and conversation helps us explore these ideals further as we touch history and shape the future. We hope you will join us for a night of citizenship as we explore important manuscripts and the artists’ interpretations.

Read More About the Exhibit

The exhibition will engage and inspire guests through direct experience of these texts and through the lectures and events exploring the ideas of the humanities more broadly. One manuscript that will be showcased is an original printing of Mary Wollstonecraft’s famous “A Vindication of the Rights of Woman: with Strictures on Political and Moral Subjects,” and pairing that text with a local artist’s depiction of Madame Walker – a well-known civil rights activist, but also a proponent of women’s rights and entrepreneurship. Another examples includes, pairing Plutarch’s “Moralia” with an oil painting of May Wright Sewall – a  prominent suffragist in Indianapolis history, but also a major proponent of women’s classical education (Plutarch is the cornerstone of classical education).

 

Special Instructions

There is free parking on Delaware Street and a parking lot behind the building – enter off of 15th or 16th Streets.