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The Morgan Library & Museum Presents Gwendolyn Brooks: A Poet’s Work In Community

Comprising more than 40 manuscripts, broadsides, and first editions, Gwendolyn Brooks: A Poet’s Work In Community, on view at The Morgan through June 5, 2022, celebrates Brooks’s roles as a poet, teacher, mentor, and community leader. The first Black author to win a Pulitzer Prize in any category, Brooks led a decades-long career marked by her engagement with struggles for racial justice.

This exhibition tells the story of Brooks as a young poet through her early published poetry, establishes her relationship with the Black arts and publishing communities of the 1960s and ’70s, and illuminates her contributions as a mentor to future writers through her children’s books and self-published guides for young poets. It traces the effect of the resulting relationships on her work and the work of other creatives, such as Dudley Randall, Sonia Sanchez, and Jeff Donaldson.

Her early writings centered around the people she grew up with and observed on the streets of Bronzeville, a predominantly Black neighborhood in Chicago. As her connections to this community grew in tandem with the international struggles against anti-Black racism, so did the scope of her poetry and her influence. This back-and-forth between poet and community opened up surprising spaces for learning, empowerment, and institution building. A Poet’s Work In Community comes at an important time in our collective history, giving us a blueprint for building community as an essential part of creative growth.

For more information, visit themorgan.org.

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