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Wednesday, January 7, 2026 |
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| New exhibitions explore Beverly Buchanan's vision of belonging |
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Beverly Buchanan (American, 1940 2015), Spirit Tree, 1980s/1990s. Found object assemblage, 18 × 12 × 11 inches. Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia; Gift of James and Lane Norton. 2024.267.
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ATHENS, GA.- What makes a place feel like home? The Athenaeum and the Georgia Museum of Art, both at the University of Georgia, are exploring this question through joint exhibitions on the work of Beverly Buchanan. Shacks, Stories and Spirit: Beverly Buchanans Art of Home will be on view at the Georgia Museum January 3 to June 28, 2026. Beverlys Athens will be on view at the Athenaeum, the universitys non-collecting contemporary art venue, affiliated with its Lamar Dodd School of Art, January 16 to March 21, 2026.
Although known nationwide, Buchanan lived in Athens from 1987 to 2010, where she found inspiration in the everyday spaces around her. Using found materials, she built sculptural shacks and photographed humble dwellings across the region. Buchanan also made vibrant drawings that brought these places to life. Through her work, Buchanan argued that these overlooked structures mattered and held stories worth preserving.
Beverly Buchanans art speaks to the South in such an intimate, powerful way, said Shawnya Harris, Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Curator of African American and African Diasporic Art. She lived here, she knew its landscapes, and she turned everyday materials into narratives of belonging.
Beverlys Athens is the first major solo exhibition of Buchanans work in the city. Guest curated by Mo Costello and Katz Tepper and funded through a grant from Teiger Foundation a private foundation devoted exclusively to supporting contemporary art curators it focuses on her the local and lived conditions that shaped her work in Athens. The exhibition emphasizes two intertwined threads from Buchanans Athens years: her modes of surviving chronic illness in the absence of an equitable healthcare system, and her multidisciplinary efforts to study and commemorate Black southern geography, traditions and forms.
Shacks, Stories and Spirit also focuses on resilience, specifically through the way Buchanan transformed weathered shacks into art.
Buchanans shacks hold layers of history and emotion, and the spirit speaks to her belief in creativity as a form of survival, Harris said. I hope visitors feel that energy from works we have in the collection.
Together, the exhibitions offer a comprehensive view of an important period in Buchanans career. Buchanans work is in collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the High Museum of Art and the Studio Museum in Harlem. She received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts and is recognized as a major voice in documenting African American life and Southern culture.
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