Frederick Douglass Mural - Reginald F. Lewis Museum
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Frederick Douglass | Liberty by Adam Himoff

The Jazz Age Gala

Frederick Douglass | Liberty is a modernized reimagining of the American abolitionist, writer, orator, and statesman Frederick Douglass (1817-1895). In the portrait, he is confident, determined, and courageous as we know him, but he is also remarkably hip and stylish in modern fashion and posed before a graffiti-scrawled space. This mix of old and new, echoed in the combination of a traditional relief printing technique with modern elements, forces the viewer to pull Douglass forward in time, examine his lasting impact on our world, and wonder at the role and life he might have lived if he was alive today.  

“It is not light that we need, but fire; it is not the gentle shower, but thunder.

We need the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake.”

– Frederick Douglass

A Message from President Terri Lee Freeman

“If you have recently driven down President Street near Pratt, you may have glanced at a mural that has been installed on the side of the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture. No, your eyes are not deceiving you, that is a rendering of Maryland’s own Frederick Douglass, posing in a pinstripe suit, fancy watch and sneakers.. Not unlike the mission of the Lewis Museum, this contemporary Linocut of Douglass seeks to provoke questions and conversation. Because he was the most photographed figure during his lifetime, many people can easily identify his likeness…even if portrayed in contemporary dress…”

Click Here | Message from the President

 

Adam Himoff | Artist Bio & Statement

Adam Himoff is a contemporary artist born in New York City in 1976. In his childhood, Adam was heavily influenced by New York’s rich multiculturalism and the abundance of art surrounding him from graffiti to public works to museum masterworks. His artistic training was largely self-directed and included classes at The Art Students League of New York, Rhode Island School of Design, and Dartmouth College, where he graduated cum laude in 1998 with a BA in English Literature and significant coursework in Studio Art. At Dartmouth, Adam was heavily influenced by Art Professor Louise Hamlin, who introduced him to woodcut and linocut printmaking and advised his senior independent project illustrating Shakespeare’s Hamlet in woodcut prints.

Following college, Adam worked for several decades in finance in New York City and Los Angeles, often juggling time with artistic projects. Adam graduated at the top of his class with a graduate degree in Entrepreneurship from UCLA Anderson School of Business in 2011. In 2013, he moved with his family to Park City, Utah, where he launched a recruiting company, which he grew for 10 years and then sold in 2022. Having returned to his artwork during Covid, creating elaborate, highly-detailed, poster-sized linocut prints, Adam used the sale of his business as an opportunity to return to his art practice full-time. Between working in his home studio, Adam also currently serves as a trustee of The Rowland Hall School in Salt Lake City, Utah, and The Kimball Art Center in Park City, Utah.

In his artwork, Adam uses line work to construct high-energy representational and abstract imagery across diverse media, including woodcut, linocut, painting, and sculpture, in order to upend the viewer’s sense of normalcy and demand an exploration and reassessment of his or her world. Common themes he addresses in his artwork are race, religion, national identity, social justice, futurism, and environmentalism.

In 2021, Adam completed and editioned “Frederick Douglass / Liberty,” a modernized hand-carved linocut print of statesman and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, which was subsequently acquired by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) as part of their permanent art collection in their NYC headquarters and later transformed into a 21-foot mural displayed in Easton, MD (the birthplace of Frederick Douglass).

Artist’s Mission:

To deconstruct familiar aspects of our reality and reconstruct them in unexpected and stimulating ways that entice powerful viewer reactions and provoke questions, reflections, and revelations

Intent Behind Frederick Douglass / Liberty:

Frederick Douglass | Liberty as an artwork is about inviting Frederick Douglass, his accomplishments, his story, and his legacy into the present. To celebrate the individual and draw attention back to him so that it invites us to reconcile him as a powerful figure from the past, put him into the context of the present, and to ask the natural questions that emerge: “How is Frederick Douglass viewed as an icon today?” “What if he were alive today; who would he be; what would he be doing to make the world a better place?” “What freedoms do our citizens live today as a result of his work and achievements?” and “What aspects of his work are unfinished today in our world?” This technique or approach is a metaphor for history as the act of pulling the past into the present, processing it, and applying it to our world and lives.