Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Exhibition reflects on 1968 Olympic protest and its legacy

- By Kate Brumback

ATLANTA >> Nearly five decades before NFL players took a knee to protest police brutality and social injustice, African-American sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos defiantly raised black-gloved fists during an Olympic medal ceremony to protest the way black people were treated in the United States.

A new exhibition at Atlanta’s High Museum of Art, “With Drawn Arms: Glenn Kaino and Tommie Smith,” seeks to forge a connection between that protest on Oct. 16, 1968, and the present. A collaborat­ion between Smith and conceptual artist Glenn Kaino, it includes sculptures, drawings, excerpts from a documentar­y, and items from Smith’s archives.

Smith, 74, won the gold medal and set a world record, and Carlos took bronze in the 200 meters at the 1968 Summer Olympics. The pair were sent home from the games in Mexico City for their podium protest and faced vilificati­on back home.

Smith knew the world’s eyes were on him and felt he had to take a stand against injustice, he said.

“In terms of doing the righteous thing or the right thing, there’s no way I could do it any differentl­y or even any better than I did then,” he told The Associated Press in a recent phone interview.

As someone who wasn’t even born when Smith raised his fist, the 46-yearold Kaino said in the same phone interview that a goal of their collaborat­ion was to tell Smith’s story and to ensure that it continued to resonate with subsequent generation­s.

The pair began working together in 2013, three years before then-San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick knelt during the national anthem, saying he was protesting racial inequality and police brutality.

With so many of the issues Smith was protesting persisting half a century later, he said he supports Kaepernick and others who are using their own high profiles to focus the public’s attention on injustice.

His advice for the younger athletes is to be prepared: “Understand why you’re doing it and who’s standing with you and then you move forward from there.”

The Smith-Kaino collaborat­ion came about by chance. Kaino, who said he’s interested in using art to instigate positive social change, had a photo of Smith’s protest taped to his computer in his studio.

A friend walked in one day, pointed at the photo and said, “Hey, Coach Smith. Want to meet him?” Before he knew it, Kaino was on a plane from Los Angeles to Atlanta to meet Smith, who lives just outside the city in Stone Mountain.

The centerpiec­e of the exhibition, “Bridge,” represents a path leading from Smith’s protest to the present, Kaino said.

The 100-foot-long sculpture comprises about 150 gold-colored casts of Smith’s arm suspended from the ceiling in an undulating wave stretching dramatical­ly across a large gallery.

Smith said he was overwhelme­d to the point of silence when he first saw it, feeling like Kaino had given physical form to ideas he was unable to express.

In a side gallery there’s a life-size, gold-plated replica of the Olympic medal podium and a frame-by-frame presentati­on of the 200-meter race at the 1968 Olympics with arbitrary smudges in the ink. Another side gallery includes items from Smith’s personal collection — awards, a signed Olympic flag, magazine covers and photos.

Excerpts from a documentar­y explore Smith’s life and his collaborat­ion with Kaino in a separate gallery.

A sculpture titled “Invisible Man (Salute)” stands in the plaza in front of the museum. From the rear, it’s a lifelike statue of Smith on the podium with his arm raised. But the front is a flat, mirrored surface that seems to blend into the surroundin­gs and reflects visitors’ own images back at them. If You Go...

“With Drawn Arms: Glenn Kaino and Tommie Smith”: Sept. 29-Jan. 6, High Museum of Art, 1280 Peachtree St. NE, Atlanta; http://www.high.org, 404733-5000. Open TuesdaySat­urday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and on Fridays until 9 p.m.; Sundays, noon-5 p.m. Admission: $14.50 (admission is half price through Oct. 13); children 5 and under, free.

 ?? KATE BRUMBACK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Sept. 26 photo, people can be seen reflected in the mirrored surface of a sculpture outside the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. The sculpture “Invisible Man (Salute)” is part of an exhibition titled “With Drawn Arms: Glenn Kaino and Tommie Smith,” which reflects on a protest by African-American sprinters at the 1968 Summer Olympics. The front of the sculpture is a flat, mirrored surface, while the back is a lifelike statue of Olympian Tommie Smith on the medal podium with his arm raised in protest.
KATE BRUMBACK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Sept. 26 photo, people can be seen reflected in the mirrored surface of a sculpture outside the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. The sculpture “Invisible Man (Salute)” is part of an exhibition titled “With Drawn Arms: Glenn Kaino and Tommie Smith,” which reflects on a protest by African-American sprinters at the 1968 Summer Olympics. The front of the sculpture is a flat, mirrored surface, while the back is a lifelike statue of Olympian Tommie Smith on the medal podium with his arm raised in protest.
 ?? KATE BRUMBACK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo from Sept. 27 shows a sculpture called “Bridge,” which is the centerpiec­e of an exhibition called “With Drawn Arms: Glenn Kaino and Tommie Smith” that opens Sept. 29 at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. The exhibition reflects on a protest at the 1968 Summer Olympics by African-American sprinters, who raised blackglove­d fists to protest the way black people were treated in the United States. The 100-foot-long sculpture comprises about 150 gold-colored casts of Smith’s arm suspended from the ceiling in an undulating wave stretching dramatical­ly across a large gallery.
KATE BRUMBACK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo from Sept. 27 shows a sculpture called “Bridge,” which is the centerpiec­e of an exhibition called “With Drawn Arms: Glenn Kaino and Tommie Smith” that opens Sept. 29 at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. The exhibition reflects on a protest at the 1968 Summer Olympics by African-American sprinters, who raised blackglove­d fists to protest the way black people were treated in the United States. The 100-foot-long sculpture comprises about 150 gold-colored casts of Smith’s arm suspended from the ceiling in an undulating wave stretching dramatical­ly across a large gallery.

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