Los Angeles Times

Giving power to the people

- — Liesl Bradner

When the Oakland Museum of California decided three years ago to create an exhibition commemorat­ing the 50th anniversar­y of the Black Panther Party and its significan­ce to black people, the museum didn’t know exactly how the discussion of race and gender inequality would reverberat­e in 2016.

“It’s fascinatin­g to observe the parallels in terms of themes and issues that were true 50 years ago and are relevant today,” said René de Guzman, curator of “All Power to the People: Black Panthers at 50.” The exhibit, which runs through Feb. 12, explores the often misunderst­ood history of the controvers­ial and revolution­ary party.

More than 200 objects on view look at aspects of the Black Panthers that are less known, such as the Free Breakfast for School Children Program as well as the Ten Point Program of principals and political demands written by co-founders Huey Newton and Bobby Seale. Their original purpose of protecting residents from police brutality closely aligns with the Black Lives Matters movement of today.

But also on view are rare artifacts and art such as a clenched fist made of wood. The show provides a contempora­ry view of the party with works by modern-day artists Hank Willis Thomas, Carrie Mae Weems, Mark Teemer and Trevor Paglen, whose emphasis is on mass surveillan­ce.

Thomas’ maze-like quilt, made of decommissi­oned orange and white prison uniforms, hides the message “We the People.”

A confiscate­d Panther rifle was repurposed into folk art with imagery of the group by Teemer, a former member and a Vietnam combat illustrato­r.

Paglen’s landscape photo of a white streak against a night sky draws similariti­es to hightech government intelligen­ce “black sites,” Internet eavesdropp­ing facilities and the secret FBI counterint­elligence program COINTELPRO initiated by Director J. Edgar Hoover.

“We included the photograph because it evokes ideas around state repression and how government handles dissent,” De Guzman said. “The intention of the FBI program was to discredit the movement, a key part of the Panthers’ story that led to the end of the party.”

 ?? Collection of the Oakland Museum of California ?? “TREE HUGGERS,” circa 2007, by David Huffman is among the works in the exhibit “All Power to the People: Black Panthers at 50.”
Collection of the Oakland Museum of California “TREE HUGGERS,” circa 2007, by David Huffman is among the works in the exhibit “All Power to the People: Black Panthers at 50.”
 ?? Carrie Mae Weems Jack Shainman Gallery, New York ?? “THE ASSASSINAT­ION of Medgar, Malcolm, and Martin,” 2008, an archival pigment print by Carrie Mae Weems, provides a contempora­ry view of the Black Panther Party.
Carrie Mae Weems Jack Shainman Gallery, New York “THE ASSASSINAT­ION of Medgar, Malcolm, and Martin,” 2008, an archival pigment print by Carrie Mae Weems, provides a contempora­ry view of the Black Panther Party.
 ?? Hank Willis Thomas Jack Shainman Gallery, New York ?? IN A STILL from “Black Righteous Space,” a 2012 multimedia work by Hank Willis Thomas, the Confederat­e f lag is recast using colors associated with the Pan-African f lag.
Hank Willis Thomas Jack Shainman Gallery, New York IN A STILL from “Black Righteous Space,” a 2012 multimedia work by Hank Willis Thomas, the Confederat­e f lag is recast using colors associated with the Pan-African f lag.

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