Faculty Artist Commissioned to Produce Mural of Historic Kansas Township
The Kansas City, Kan., Community College Board of Trustees has
awarded John Newman a commission to produce a mural depicting the
historic Quindaro township of Kansas City and its relationship to
slavery and the famed Underground Railroad.
Newman, associate professor
of art in the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences
at the University of Arkansas, grew up in Kansas, is an African
American and is a past resident of the Kansas City, Kan., area.
“This
subject was dear to my heart,” said Newman. “My family
migrated from Arkansas to Kansas in 1954 when I was six years old.
I have always been aware of Quindaro’s rich heritage as I
walked and drove over much of this inner-city area while growing
up. As part of the research for the mural, I will be touring the
area with professor Collins, a noted Kansas City history professor
who has written extensively on the Quindaro area.”
During
the tour, Newman will be photographing and sketching significant
points of historical interest. He expects to walk the bluff area
and see remnants of the paths taken by early African Americans escaping
from pro-slavery Missouri into Kansas. He is also scheduled to meet
with Jessie Hope, a longtime resident of the area.
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The proposed
project is a 39-foot, three-panel oil mural on canvas with each
panel measuring 7 feet by 13 feet. The painting will depict the
anti-slavery activities of the early Quindaro town-site settlers
and will note the role of the site as a station on the Underground
Railroad. Newman has been granted space to work on the mural by
the Fayetteville public school system at the old Jefferson Elementary
School.
### CONTACT: John Newman, associate professor, department
of art J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences 479-575-7587,
newman@uark.edu
Lynn Fisher, communications director Fulbright College
479-575-7272, lfisher@uark.edu

