UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Felecia Davis, Penn State associate professor of architecture in the College of Arts and Architecture’s Stuckeman School, is contributing to a mobile art installation that helps memorialize the liberators of Black America as part of her involvement as a co-founding member of the Black Reconstruction Collective (BRC).
Titled “Unmonument,” the installation consists of a matte-black, steel industrial lift and made its New York debut on Aug. 8 at the Weeksville Heritage Center in Brooklyn. It will make its way to Syracuse, New York in October and to Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, in December before moving on to Los Angeles and Atlanta in 2025.
Along with Davis, fellow BRC cofounders Olalekan Jeyifous, Amanda Williams, Mitch McEwen, Sekou Cooke, J. Yolande Daniels and Emanuel Admassu are participants in the traveling installation that seeks not only to memorialize trailblazers in Black history — such as Harriet Tubman, Nat Turner and Toussaint Louverture — but also to challenge preconceived ideas about what monuments should look like.
The BRC focused on using the basic industrial lift for its “inherently and intentionally unspectacular structure” and because it’s “flexible, unprecious and moveable.” The group called it an infrastructure for “recognizing the community that surrounds it, a beacon to celebrate, to gather and to come together.”
The multi-site approach taken by the BRC takes inspiration from the Surrealist "exquisite corpse" game that was popular in the 1920s in which each participant would take a turn writing or drawing on a sheet of paper, folding it to conceal his or her contribution and then passing it to the next player for a further contribution. As such, "Unmonument" will be modified at each installation site it touches by engaging visitors in a “call and response” exercise.
“By adapting a refurbished maintenance lift as a mobile site of intervention and then sequentially passing it from one Black artist to another — location to location — the industrial object is transformed into a powerful yet accessible symbol of resilience and ingenuity,” said Jeyifous, who organized the installation in Brooklyn.