WASHINGTON, DC.- Under the leadership of Martin Luther King Jr., non-violent protest became the defining feature of the modern civil rights movement in America.
The Smithsonians National Portrait Gallery will open an exhibition recognizing Kings extraordinary impact on American civil rights June 28. One Life: Martin Luther King Jr. will mark the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and Kings stirring I Have a Dream speech, which took place Aug. 28, 1963. Through historic photographs, prints, paintings and memorabiliachosen principally from the Portrait Gallerys collectionthis one-room exhibition will trace the trajectory of Kings career, from his rise to prominence as the leader of the national civil rights movement to his work as an anti-war activist and advocate for those living in poverty.
The story of civil rights in America is inseparable from Martin Luther King Jr., said Kim Sajet, director of the National Portrait Gallery. This focused exhibition on Dr. King captures the galvanizing effect he had on the nation through non-violent protest.
A brilliant strategist, King first demonstrated the power of passive resistance in 1955, while helping to lead the prolonged bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala., that succeeded in dismantling bus segregation laws. Fresh from the victory that brought him national recognition, the charismatic King cofounded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and took the lead in directing its civil rights initiatives. In a carefully orchestrated campaign of peaceful protest to expose and defeat racial injustice, King awakened the nations conscience and built support for the landmark civil rights legislation of the 1960s.
The exhibition includes photographs documenting significant moments in Kings career. One shows King and Rosa Parks at a mass meeting during the Montgomery bus boycott, another pictures King and Ralph Abernathy as they ride the first integrated bus in Montgomery and another represents King witnessing President Lyndon B. Johnsons signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The exhibition also features commemorative buttons and the program from the March on Washington, the original art created for the Time cover when the magazine named King Man of the Year and two issues of Life magazine covering his assassination and funeral.
The exhibition will include video segments from the CBS news coverage of the March on Washington.
The sole media partner for One Life: Martin Luther King Jr. is The Atlantic. In 1963, just months before the March on Washington, The Atlantic published what would come to be known as Kings Letter from Birmingham Jail, a handwritten draft he wrote behind bars and sent to the magazine.
The curator of this exhibition is National Portrait Gallery senior curator of photographs, Ann Shumard.
The National Portrait Gallerys One Life room has focused on the lives and influence of Katharine Graham, Abraham Lincoln, Sandra Day OConnor, Thomas Paine, Elvis Presley, Ronald Reagan and Walt Whitman. Currently, the room is focused on the career of Amelia Earhart.