The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum will celebrate the work of renowned sculptor Richard Hunt with a special exhibition that showcases his groundbreaking art and explores the history that so often inspired him. "Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt” opens October 25 and runs through April 20, 2025.
Hunt, who lived and worked in Chicago all his life, produced more public sculptures than any other artist in American history. They can be found in plazas and parks from Champaign and Peoria to Washington and New York. He was the subject of more than 160 exhibitions during his 70-year career. His abstract art gave form to the pain and the hopes of African Americans striving for true equality.
"Freedom in Form” will be the first major Hunt exhibition since his death last year. Already, a 22-foot sculpture by Hunt has been installed outside the ALPLM’s museum building. Other massive sculptures will be represented in the exhibit through miniature prototypes called maquettes. The exhibition also includes smaller-scale works. But the goal is to give visitors a glimpse into Hunt’s creative process, so the exhibition will include tools from Hunt’s studio and books from his library.
For the first time anywhere, visitors will be able to see two works together that serve as emotional bookends to Hunt’s career. One is the 1956 sculpture "Hero’s Head,” inspired by Hunt seeing the battered body of Emmett Till, the Chicago teenager who was murdered in Mississippi. The other is a maquette of a memorial to Till that Hunt was working on when he died.
"I had the privilege of visiting Mr. Hunt’s studio and talking to him,” said Christina Shutt, executive director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. "I knew then that we could present a unique and powerful exhibition of his work. There was a story to tell about a visionary artist inspired by 400 years of pain and struggle, some of which connected directly to President Lincoln’s historic achievements.”
The exhibition was produced by ALPLM Exhibits and Shows Director Lance Tawzer and curated by Ross Stanton Jordan, curatorial manager at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum. After its run at the ALPLM, the exhibition moves to the Loyola University Museum of Art in Chicago. The two institutions are producing a hard-cover catalog with photographs of the featured art and essays about Hunt’s career. The project received cooperation from The Richard Hunt Trust, as well as the DePaul University Museum of Art, DuSable Black History Museum and Education Center, Illinois State Museum and Illinois Governor’s Mansion.
"An art exhibition of this scale is a new challenge for the ALPLM, but we thought the idea was too good to pass up,” Tawzer said. "We had an Illinois artist who built an international reputation exploring themes of race, justice and civil rights in America – basically, looking at where this nation stood 150 years after Abraham Lincoln wrestled with those same issues. We think people will be fascinated by this look at the intersection of art and history.”
Admission to "Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt” will be included free in the regular ALPLM admission price.