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    You are at:Home » America needs the ghosts of slavery to remind us of how our nation was really built
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    America needs the ghosts of slavery to remind us of how our nation was really built

    January 11, 20232 Mins Read9 Views
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    Augmented reality artist Marcus Brown stands at the Solomon Northup historical market in New Orleans. (LPB photo)
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    Artist Marcus Brown’s augmented reality exhibit has opened in New Orleans.

    (Source Drum Beats LA):

    Artist Marcus Brown’s augmented reality exhibit has opened in New Orleans.

    “America needs the ghosts of slavery to remind us of how our nation was really built, said artist,” said Marcus Brown whose augmented reality (AR) exhibit has opened in New Orleans.

    Brown created musically interactive AR installation series known as Slavery Trails to virtually mark areas where enslaved people were held, sold, and worked in the United States.

    At the corner of Esplanade Ave and Charters St in New Orleans, Solomon Northup’s historical marker stands. A lone brown metal fixture that tells of Northup’s 12 years of slavery. Using a digital app on a mobile device, visitors can now stand at the marker and experience a virtual representation of enslaved peoples using present-day Black Americans.

    These virtual sculptures are only visible by smartphone or smart devices at historical marker sites.

    The Northup installation opened on January 4, 2023, the same day Solomon Northup gained his freedom nearly 200 years ago.

    Brown is a native of New Orleans, sculptor, painter, inventor, musician, and educator. His work includes national and international exhibits and performances in New York City, Berlin, Germany, and Krakow, Poland, the Ogden Museum of Southern Art, The McKenna Museum of African American Art, and The New Orleans Museum of Art.

     

     

    Augmented reality artist Marcus Brown stands at the Solomon Northup historical market in New Orleans. (LPB photo)
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    Carma Henry

    Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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