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BLACK WOMAN GENIUS: Elizabeth Talford Scott-Tapestries of Generations
The Jazz Age Gala

Just let me look at the knots and I’ll forget-me-not.

– Elizabeth Talford Scott

The Reginald F. Lewis Museum presents BLACK WOMAN GENIUS: Elizabeth Talford Scott—Tapestries of Generations, in partnership with the Elizabeth Talford Scott Community Initiative, the 2023-24 Exhibition Development Seminar (EDS) capstone project for MICA’s undergraduate Curatorial Studies Concentration.  The exhibition focuses on Elizabeth Talford Scott as a key figure for Black women in the fiber arts. Her work will be showcased alongside contemporary Black women fiber artists from the Chesapeake area. The exhibit will explore themes including Ancestry, Tradition, Fiber Narratives, and Healing, aiming to spotlight the distinctive elements of Elizabeth Talford Scott’s work and featured artists including: Kibibi Ajanku, Aliana Grace Bailey, Aliyah Bonnette, Mahari Chabwera, Dr. Joan M.E. Gaither, Murjoni Merriweather, Glenda Richardson, Joyce J. Scott and Nastassja Swift.

We will showcase several of Elizabeth Talford Scott’s remarkable works. Among these, “Stamps and Flags II,” one of her early creations, pays tribute to her evolution and exploration as an artist. This exhibition aims to emphasize Elizabeth’s significant influence as a maternal figure for generations of Black women fiber artists. Through her exceptional artistry, she brilliantly reflects her life experiences as a Black Woman.

The Elizabeth Talford Scott Initiative

This initiative brings together five museums and four university sites across Baltimore City for a reunion of the artist’s work from February through May 2024. Each venue will have at least two Exhibition De students from the participating colleges—Coppin State University, Johns Hopkins University, MICA, and Morgan State University—working on a presentation of Talford Scott’s work for their gallery spaces and organizing a free public program. Under the guidance of 2023-24 EDS Instructor Deyane Moses, the students will determine the curatorial direction of their presentation, drawing out connections to each organization’s collection, space, history, and/or audience.

Major support for “No Stone Unturned” provided by the Bunting Family Foundation and Friends of EDS. Community Day is supported by Lorraine Whittlesey & Markell Whittlesey. Printed and digital materials are supported by The William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund. The Closing Reception is supported by Carol and Jerry Doctrow. In-kind support is provided by the Estate of Elizabeth Talford Scott at Goya Contemporary Gallery.


NOTE: Purchasing a ticket to BLACK WOMAN GENIUS: Elizabeth Talford Scott—Tapestries of Generations view grants visitors access to all current Museum exhibitions.

Elizabeth Talford Scott (February 7, 1916 – April 25, 2011)

An artist, a mother, and a trailblazer – Elizabeth Talford Scott’s remarkable journey commenced in Chester County, South Carolina, on the grounds where her family had once been enslaved. Elizabeth spent her early years in the cotton fields, where the Caldwell family – including her parents, Samuel and Mary Jane Caldwell – lived on the Blackstalk Plantation. Money was scarce, prompting the family to craft everything by hand, from clothing to shoes to other day-to-day needs. At nine, Elizabeth began learning quilt-making from her mother, Mary Jane; this tradition was known as “piecing cloths.” Born into a culture where every scrap held value, Elizabeth continued this age-old tradition. Quilting wasn’t confined to women and girls. Elizabeth’s father, Samuel, was also a quilter, using red clay, berries, and local resources to dye the cloth to “give them some color.”

Amidst the backdrop of the Great Migration, Elizabeth became part of this transformative wave from the 1910s to the 1970s when nearly six million Black people moved from the Southern United States to industrial area in the North, Midwest, and West. In 1940, she settled in West Baltimore’s Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood, an historically Black community. In 1948, she welcomed her daughter, Joyce Jane Scott into the world with her then-husband Charles Scott, Jr. from Durham, NC. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Elizabeth dedicated her time to raising her daughter while working as a domestic, often serving as a caterer and caretaker. It was in the mid-1970s that she embarked on her extraordinary journey as a fiber artist who later impacted the art world.

Kibibi Ajanku

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Aliana Grace Bailey

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Aliyah Bonnette

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Mahari Chabwera

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Dr. Joan M.E. Gaither

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Murjoni Merriweather

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Glenda Richardson

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Nastassja Swift

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Dr. Joyce J. Scott

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Program Schedule:

Historic Change: Celebrating the Activism and Impact of Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray

FREE EVENT | Saturday, February 3 | 11 AM – 5 PM

Join us to celebrate the latest release in the American Women Quarters™ Program! AWQ is the first circulating coin program dedicated to honoring women whose achievements, triumphs, and legacies reflect the strength, perseverance, and resiliency of our nation. The Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum and the United States Mint, in partnership with the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture, invite you to Historic Change: Celebrating the Activism and Impact of Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray. Taking place in conjunction with the opening of the Black Woman Genius exhibition at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum, this free community day will explore the civil rights activism and impact of Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray. Attendees will learn more about Rev. Dr. Murray’s life and her leadership in the civil rights movement, as well as her dedication to community service in Baltimore.

Quilted Education  Film Screening and  Fiber Art Workshop

Saturday, February 3, 2024

 1 PM – 3 PM

Explore Black History  through quilting and with a short film screening of QUILTED EDUCATION.This film celebrates a mother’s artistry and determination to fill the educational void for her daughter regarding Black History within the public school system. A conversation will follow with filmmaker Kayla Robinson and quilter historian Karen Robinson about their Black history story quilt which features over 64 Black pioneers in the fields of sports,military service, science,politics,civil rights, performing arts, literature and more. Museum visitors will be given the opportunity to create their own Black History quilt square with this mother – daughter team.

Black Girl Saturday School: Jam Session
Saturday, March 16 | 1 pm to 3 pm | Museum Admission

Black girls are deep wellsprings of knowledge, curiosities, and musings. Often these qualities are stifled by social narratives that say “you don’t know nothing! You’re too young!” By exploring the theme of Art as Memory & Narrative, Dr. LaShay Harvey will lead participants of all ages through an immersive experience where we will study the language, history and culture of Black Girlhood through contemporary fiber works presented in BLACK WOMAN GENIUS: Elizabeth Talford Scott—Tapestries of Generation. Aliyah Bonnette, a Black Woman Genius featured artist, will join in a discussion of her work during this session. The session culminates in a storytelling “jam session” performance inspired by the courageous journey back to our girlhood with the expressed intention of reconnecting to the inherent brilliance of Black Girls. All ages and stages are welcome to participate. Recommended for ages 18+ and olderBlack Girl Saturday School® is the place where the study of Black girls’ and women’s lives is valued, appreciated, cultivated, immersive, healing, restorative, grounding, available, continual, fun, and more.

Helena Hicks Speaker Series | Women’s History Month – Dr. Raynetta Wiggins Jackson 

Thursday, March 21 | 5:45 pm to 8 pm | FREE EVENT

Celebrate Women’s History Month with the Billie Holiday Center for Liberations Arts (JHU)  for their annual Helena Hicks Speaker Series featuring  Dr. Raynetta Wiggins-Jackson, the Africana Archives Curatorial Fellow of Inheritance Baltimore & Billie Holiday Center for Liberation Arts. Dr. Wiggins-Jackson’s lecture will focus on “Ethel’s Place: Celebrating Ethel Ennis Baltimore’s First Lady of Jazz.” Her lecture grows out of her curatorial and exhibition work on the legendary jazz singer Ethel Ennis.