REMINDER: Charlotte Comes to Salem!

Dedication ceremony THIS WEEKEND for 'The Moving Spirit of Love' - a bronze memorial in honor of Charlotte Forten Grimke

On behalf of the City of Salem’s Public Art Commission and the Charlotte Forten Memorial Project Advisory Group, Mayor Dominick Pangallo is thrilled to celebrate the long-awaited arrival of The Moving Spirit of Love, a life-sized bronze memorial in honor of Charlotte Forten Grimké, created for our community by artist Ai Qiu Hopen of Humanity Memorial Inc. 

A dedication ceremony will be held in Charlotte Forten Park, 289 Derby Street, Salem, THIS Saturday, November 16, 2024 at 1:00pm, with a rain date of Sunday, Nov. 17th.  Charlotte herself will be present to share poems and stories of her time in Salem, courtesy of renowned local theater company History Alive Inc. and actress Samanth Searles. Full schedule of events to be released closer to the event. Sign up for our email list here: https://bit.ly/CFPMSignUp

Accompanying the sculpture, some of Charlotte’s writings will also be on display in the park in November via a hand-printed ‘banner’ created by artist Mitchel Ahern.  Ahern is a Lynn-based letterpress printmaker and performing artist, whose work has appeared at the DeCordova Museum, Salem National Park Service Visitor Center, Endicott College, as well as many other venues, galleries and festivals. His piece “Charlotte Forten, Journals 1855 and 1864” is a 128-foot-long horizontal fabric scroll, printed on unbleached twill, using antique wood type on an 1830 Acorn Iron Hand Press at the Museum of Printing in Haverhill, MA. The quotes he chose to highlight are from Charlotte Forten’s Journals and showcase her work both as an abolitionist and as a teacher.

To learn more: https://www.salemma.gov/public-art-commission/pages/charlotte-forten-mem...

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Julie Barry  (She/Her)

Senior Planner, Arts & Culture

City of Salem | Department of Planning & Community Development

98 Washington St., 2nd Floor | Salem, MA  01970

978-619-5685  ext. 42506 | jbarry@salem.com

 

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The land we recognize today as Salem is Naumkeag, or fishing place, where generations of Indigenous people lived and passed through for centuries. (Read the City of Salem's Indigenous Land Acknowledgment here).

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