Specifications for Prospective Exhibitors

Thank you for your interest in exhibiting this innovative, provocative and bold exploration into the nature of reparative justice.
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Repossessions is a group exhibition inspired by the concept of reparations: the effort to repair the economic and psychological devastation caused by slavery for descendants of enslaved African Americans.
It presents the work of five Black artists commissioned to create artworks based on documents from the enslavement and Jim Crow eras in the United States. Chelle Barbour, Marcus Brown, Rodney Ewing, Kenyatta A.C. Hinkle (Olomidara Yaya), and Curtis Patterson each offer insightful ways to understand the significance of the original documents, which were offered to the artists by white families working toward repair through an initiative of The Reparations Project in collaboration with Reparations4Slavery and date from the 1860s to the early 1900s.
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As of 2025, Repossessions exhibition includes the following elements:
5 Artworks
Video installation
Wall text on the nature of reparations and the concept for Repossessions
Artist statements
Optional elements include an interactive wall display where viewers can respond to a series of prompts regarding the nature of repair.
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The Repossessions exhibition requires between 1,200 - 3,000 sq. feet of gallery space.
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Environmental controls: 18–21°C (65–70°F) with 45–55% relative humidity, especially critical for works on paper.
UV-protected lighting: No direct sunlight or unfiltered fluorescent lighting; all works require low-lux (≤50 lux/5 foot candles) exposure.
Secure hanging/display infrastructure: Ability to hang framed or unframed works with museum-standard fittings (D-rings, cleats, or wall-safe magnets).
Specifications
Basic Requirements
Costs
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The basic fee is $5,000, which covers the curatorial fee for Bridget R. Cooks, PhD’s coordination of exhibition details with a prospective exhibitor’s curatorial and gallery staff.
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Participating museums and galleries are required to cover costs of artwork shipments. In addition, artwork crates and original packing materials must be retained for return shipment or replaced.
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Venues must insure all works at their appraised value for the duration of the loan (from arrival to de-installation).
Condition reports required on arrival and departure.
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The exhibitor is responsible for:
Preparing the space for the exhibit, including wall painting and movable wall placement.
Hanging and lighting the art according to industry standards
Printing and mounting of all interpretive materials, including exhibition title, artists’ statements, curator’s statements, and other interpretive materials, as provided by curator.
Set up of video playback systems for the accompanying video shorts.
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If artist and curator participation is desired at opening events, lectures, curatorial walkthroughs, and other programming, the exhibiting venue will be responsible for covering travel and honoraria costs.