WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian American Art Museum announced today that Dalila Scruggs will join its curatorial team as the Augusta Savage Curator of African American Art. Scruggss expertise ranges across different types of mediaincluding painting, prints, sculpture and photographyfrom the 19th- and 20th centuries. In her new role, Scruggs will help shape the museums exhibition program and collecting priorities as they relate broadly to African American art, a longstanding area of strength of the museums holdings distinguished by its depth and range. She will also contribute to American Voices and Visions, a major cross-departmental initiative to comprehensively reinstall the museums collection. She begins work at the museum April 22.
The position is named to honor Savages legacy as an artist, teacher and community art program director in Harlem in the 1930s. Fittingly, Scruggs has served in education and curatorial roles and has sought to draw on her experience as a museum educator to cultivate a curatorial practice that is visitor- and object-centered.
I am delighted to welcome Dalila Scruggs to SAAM as the inaugural Augusta Savage Curator of African American Art, said Stephanie Stebich, the Margaret and Terry Stent Director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. SAAM is home to one of the most significant collections of African American art in the world, and I am so pleased that Dr. Scruggs will bring fresh, thoughtful analysis to these works that evoke themes both universal and specific to the African American and the American experience.
Scruggs comes to the museum from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, where she has been the curator for photography and prints since 2021. She also has served as a guest curator at the Brooklyn Museum since 2020. Previously, she has held positions at the Paul R. Jones Collection of American Art at the University of Alabama as a consulting curator, at the Brooklyn Museum as an assistant curator of American art and at the Williams College Museum of Art as a curatorial fellow.
Her publications include Activism in Exile: Elizabeth Catletts Mask for Whites, a contribution to the scholarly journal American Art, published by the Smithsonian American Art Museum with the University of Chicago Press, and several exhibition catalogs, including contributions to Brooklyn Museum: Highlights collections handbook and an entry for the upcoming The Awe of the Arctic: A Visual History for the New York Public Library.
Scruggs joins the curatorial department led by Randall Griffey, the museums head curator and joins a team of 11 curators at the museum.
Scruggs graduated from Cornell University with a bachelors degree in art history and earned a doctorate from Harvard University in the history of art and architecture. Her dissertation The Love of Liberty Has Brought Us Here: The American Colonization Society and the Imaging of African-American Settlers in Liberia, West Africa focuses on African American daguerreotypist August Washington and his photographs in service to the American Colonization Society, a 19th-century reform organization dedicated to sending African Americans to Liberia, West Africa as an alternative to promoting radical abolition or perpetual slavery in the United States. From 2007 to 2008, Scruggs was a Terra Foundation for American Art Predoctoral Fellow as part of the Smithsonian American Art Museums prestigious fellowship program.
The Augusta Savage Curator of African American Art is generously funded by anonymous donors with a $5 million endowment gift to the museum. The donors requested the position be named for the trailblazing artist and educator to elevate her legacy.
Augusta Savage
Augusta Savage (1892-1962) was a renowned sculptor and teacher who effectively used her work to challenge discrimination and promote civil and womens rights. When she arrived in New York City in 1921, she met with some initial success, receiving commissions to produce busts of W. E. B. Du Bois and Marcus Garvey. Such works won her the attention of African American community groups.
She was dedicated to expanding educational and professional opportunities for African American artists. In 1932, she founded the Savage Studio of Arts and Crafts in Harlem, she was a cofounder of the Harlem Artists Guild that secured employment for Black artists, and in 1937 she helped establish and was the first director of the Harlem Community Art Center, which received funding from the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Through her work at these institutions, she not only nurtured the careers of many younger African American artists, including Jacob Lawrence, Gwendolyn Knight, and Norman Lewis, but she also actively challenged the biases among WPA administrators by insisting African American artists deserved support. As an artist, however, Savage often struggled to find backers for her own work.
In 1939 she opened the Salon of Contemporary Negro Art, the first gallery in the United States dedicated specially to exhibiting and selling works by African American artists. That same year, she sculpted a huge plaster for the Worlds Fair inspired by Lift Every Voice and Sing, a song widely considered the Black national anthem. Like much of her work, it was not cast in bronze and was later destroyed. She created fewer artworks after 1940, when she moved to upstate New York, though she continued to teach.
The art historian Richard Powell calls Savage a legend in African American art history because so much of her life was filled with struggle, with perseverance and with creativity, all mixed up.
To learn more about Savage, listen to the episode The Monumental Imagination of Augusta Savage produced by the Smithsonians podcast Sidedoor, and explore the digital comic My Monument Will Be In Their Work, published by the Smithsonian American Art Museum.