Albuquerque Museum Winter 2020

Page 6

LET THE SUNSHINE IN

Walter McDonald, Chelwood Park Boulevard NE, November 1969, Digital reproduction of a 35mm slide, Albuquerque Museum

T

Oral Histories Shine a Light on the Past HE CURRENT COMMUNITY

It was important to the curators though

would quickly turn. He was on hand for the

HISTORY EXHIBITION,

that the exhibition incorporate local

unrest, and his photographs of that day

Let the Sunshine In, opened

voices. To that end, Hartke and Prinster

are in the Museum’s Photo Archives.

December 21, 2019. The

conducted oral history interviews of

In the interview, he reflected on the

project was a collaboration between the

local residents in order to gain important

chaos of that day: “I think that was part of

Museum’s Digital Archivist Jill Hartke

insights into Albuquerque’s past.

the dilemma for the cops too. Say, these

and Assistant History Curator Rebecca

Interviewee Jim Kubie, former presi-

Prinster. The exhibition is a departure

dent of Kurt’s Camera Corral, discussed

arms and ready to, you know—these are

from the usual exhibitions that circulate

the civil unrest that occurred around

folk. Even to the point where you say, ‘Hey

through the Keleher gallery because

Roosevelt Park June 13–15, 1971. He was

I know you, didn’t we go to high school

it was conceived of and developed

at the park June 13 to photograph the

together?’ kind of thing. So it was not

by Museum staff, not by an outside

day’s goings-on, as was typical for him on

something that [the cops] were used to.”

community group.

a Sunday. Little did he know the peace

4

WINTER 2020

Art. History. People.

aren’t criminals. They’re not carrying side

Other stories in Let the Sunshine In in-


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