
Discover NYC's hidden history of enslavement at these new augmented reality memorials
As part of the city's Arts in the Park initiative, Brown's " Slavery Trails" takes historical sites that are tied to slavery and crafts them into digital memorials using sculpture and AR that visitors may access via mobile device. Manhattan will house two exhibitions while Brooklyn and Queens will showcase one; "merging technology, music and history into public memory spaces that honor the enslaved and challenge contemporary narratives," according to a press release about the exhibition.
Manhattan's two sculptures are titled "The Slave Market: Wall Street" and "New York Slave Conspiracy of 1741. Brooklyn and Queens work together to tell "American Gold III" and "American Gold IV," respectively.
In Manhattan, "The Slave Market: Wall Street" makes visible the enslaved Africans and Native Americans who were bought and sold during the 1711 New York slave market. The second installation in Manhattan, titled "New York Slave Conspiracy of 1741," brings attention to the mass hysteria in response to mysterious fires which led to the execution and exile of primarily Black and enslaved New Yorkers. Both are located in City Hall Park in Lower Manhattan.
In Brooklyn and Queens, "American Gold III & IV" debut golden sculptures of enslaved people overseas on slave ships in the Middle Passage. The Brooklyn artwork is located at Bush Terminal Park; in Queens, find the artwork at Astoria Park.
"My mission is to create artworks that educate the public on important issues while crossing media and societal boundaries," Brown said on his website. "As an artist with enslaved African ancestors, I feel a responsibility to use my work to tell their stories. To create new works that empower and bring everyone together. I see my role as an artist as a technical, scholarly, and performative one."
I feel a responsibility to use my work to tell their stories.
Each piece comes equipped with more information available via mobile device and merges site-specific research with AR sculpture and sound. Brown's goal with the works is just a small part of a larger endeavor to create a decentralized memorial to slavery in the United States. His new pieces will help to tell New York City's often overlooked history with slavery.
Slavery Trails is not only AR interactive, but musically interactive as well. These two art forms are combined with deep historical research and produce a participatory memorial which centers the slavery narrative specifically on the enslaved peoples and their efforts at resistance.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The National
an hour ago
- The National
Edinburgh set to host 100+ free events in festival of knowledge
A myriad of issues – including personal data, the use of Scots language, future cities and a range of other social topics – will be discussed during the Royal Society of Edinburgh 's (RSE) Curious Festival of Knowledge. A SERIES of talks and workshops on health, the creative arts and video games will be held during a festival on knowledge in September. Held from September 6-14, one of the free festival's highlights is a talk on Scotland's colonial past, led by PhD student Ash Charlton, who was recently a project researcher with the University of Edinburgh's anatomical museum. The talk, titled Taken, studied, displayed: readdressing the University of Edinburgh's African skull collections – will explore a recent project to research and improve documentation of the museum's skull collections as a basis for future repatriation requests. READ MORE: Scots Language Centre plunged into crisis as board resigns over payments row Charlton said: 'This event will share the stories of the individuals whose skulls are in the collection, where they came from and how they became part of the museum's collection. 'Unfortunately, very little is known about most of these individuals through historic erasure and lack of documentation, although through this talk I will discuss some of the few cases we know more about. 'Conversely a lot more is known about the 'donors' who presented these human remains to the university. Medical students, doctors, religious missionaries, geologists and botanists were all responsible for contributing to the growing anatomy collections.' Play for Good: Video game exhibition Also featuring at the festival is Play for Good, a video game exhibition on how they can help with health, wellbeing and social inclusion. Event organiser Dr Andrew Reid, of Abertay University and member of the Young Academy of Scotland, said: 'Simply put, designing games for good means thinking about how games can provide a positive outcome to various social or cultural environments. 'We've got a couple of projects here that are showing games to promote physical activity by using your body as an input, all the way through to exploring mental health as a topic. 'These are generally spaces that are quite difficult to deal with in any given context, but within games we create a safe space to explore some very challenging issues and very challenging conversations.' Walking tour around Edinburgh's Greyfriars Kirkyard While many of the Curious events are held within the RSE, this year's programme also features an interactive walking tour around Edinburgh's Greyfriars Kirkyard. Led by Daria Tuhtar, the tour will explore the unique and intricate language of symbols and metaphors that many of the monuments in Greyfriars are decorated with, and how people's attitudes towards death have changed with the passage of time. The tour will uncover how ideas of death, immortality and resurrection coalesce in one of the most striking locations that Edinburgh boasts. Royal Society of Edinburgh general secretary professor Jo Shaw said: 'Today we announce the programme of the RSE's Curious festival. 'Curious is an opportunity to throw open the door to the RSE, Scotland's National Academy. We're bringing together some of Scotland's leading thinkers, covering a broad range of topics – from video games to UFOs – and starting important conversations around big ideas. 'Everyone is welcome, and you don't need any prior knowledge to take part and learn something new. Most importantly, every event is free. Just bring yourself and your curiosity.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Jared Goff and stunning wife announce life-changing family news
NFL star Jared Goff and his wife Christen have welcomed their first child together. The Detroit Lions quarterback and his influencer wife announced the news with an emotional post on Instagram on Tuesday afternoon. The couple shared a series of black-and-white photos of themselves holding their daughter, who they revealed will be named Romy Isabelle Goff. There was no caption to the post other than their new daughter's name. The comments were quickly flooded with congratulatory messages for the duo. The couple revealed to the world that they were expecting a child together back in February, when Christen made a public appearance while visibly pregnant. Christen debuted her baby bump on the red carpet of the NFL Honors ceremony, as she took several photos with her Detroit Lions quarterback husband by her side. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Christen Harper Goff (@christengoff) Christen and Jared met through the celebrity dating app Raya in 2019, the same place where gymnast Simone Biles met her NFL husband, Chicago Bears defender Jonathan Owens, in 2020. The Goff's lives drastically changed when he was traded from the Rams to the Lions in 2021, forcing both to leave Los Angeles behind. The couple was in New Orleans to attend the show at the Saenger Theatre has Jared was nominated for MVP and the NFL Man of the Year. Goff led the Lions to a 15-2 regular season record before the team was defeated by the Washington Commanders in the Divisional round of the playoffs, ending their season. The pregnancy announcement came a few days after Christen stunned in a Sports Illustrated Swimsuit photoshoot - as Jared showed his approval. The Lions WAG posed in a dark-grey bikini at Round Hill Hotel & Villas in Jamaica for one of the magazine's editions.


Time Out
4 hours ago
- Time Out
L.A.'s new Photo Booth Museum captures a different era of selfies
In Los Angeles, analog photo booths have been growing in popularity, and these film photo booths can be increasingly found scattered throughout the city. It's official: Vintage photo booths are having a moment. Over their digital counterparts, the cool crowd is opting for old-school photo booth portraits developed on the spot and printed on black-and-white film. I get the appeal—after a recent visit to Paris, a film strip of four shots of my fiancé and me from a 1960s Montmartre photo booth is one of my favorite souvenirs. The tactile strip captures a specific moment in time—and feels more significant than dozens of attempts for the perfect selfie. Leading the resurgence is Bay Area-based photo booth supplier Photomatica, which has seen its business boom in recent years—especially when Chrissy Teigen ordered one of its restored vintage booths for herself. Photomatica also custom-makes retro-looking digital photo booths, which can be found in venues like Desert 5 Spot, El Cid and the Fonda and El Rey theaters (it also just unveiled an analog booth at the Beverly Hilton last month). But after opening a Photo Booth Museum in San Francisco's Castro District earlier this year, the company has brought the concept here, to the heart of Silver Lake. Starting Thursday, July 17, for the first time, you'll have four analog photo booths in one place—plus one vintage-style (and adorable) digital photo booth from the 2020s—to choose from for your own personal photo shoot. Styled as a 1970s living room, the 'museum' is not a museum, as such. True, there are little print-outs detailing the history of each machine, but beyond that, don't expect to learn a ton about the inner workings of photo booths. But be honest, that's probably not why you're here, anyway. The vintage machines—made by L.A.-based photo booth manufacturer Auto-Photo—date back to the 1950s, '60s and '70s, and have been lovingly restored by Photomatica so they're in pristine working condition. This is even more impressive when you learn that there are only some 250 functional analog photo booths still in existence. Inside the vintage booths, be ready to strike a pose as soon as you push the button—you get very little warning. And afterward, expect to wait three to five minutes for your film strip to print (still pretty remarkable, when you think about it). When the strip does come out, be careful—it'll be wet with the chemicals used in the rapid, darkroom-style development process. There are blow-dryers plugged in throughout the space for this very purpose. My favorites were the Model 14—the first to your left as you walk in—with a groovy, heart-shaped pattern as the background, and the earlier Model 11 from the 1950s, which sports a starry backdrop. Many of the machines have handy mirrors on the outside so you can check your appearance before you head in for your close-up. All of the analog booths print in black-and-white, which I was fine with (I think I actually prefer the way I look in grayscale). And as someone who admittedly doesn't love having my picture taken, by the time I got to the third booth, I was definitely having fun with it. Some machines produce more washed-out results, while some prints come out darker, but I found the lighting in each booth to be surprisingly flattering—and besides, perfect uniformity isn't the point here. But—not to be basic—the contemporary, millennial-pink take on a vintage booth did call out to me. And as far as digital photo booths go, it offered a superior experience to most you'll find in a bar. You could choose from color or black-and-white photos, and the color option still had a 1970s vibe, with its orange-curtain background. Plus, it admittedly is nice to be able to preview your shot on a screen and know when the flash is about to go off. The digital is also the best option for if you're in a hurry—the digital photos print instantly—and it's the only one in the museum that supplies you with two prints of your photo session, perfect for you and a friend or date. There's no admission fee, but you can expect to pay $7.50 for each turn in a film photo booth (which gets a little confusing when you see the '25 cents' and '50 cents' signs on the outside of these booths from back in the day) or $6.50 in the digital booth. That adds up to $36.50 if you want to sample each once—plus an extra $10 if you want to hit up the key chain booth, where you can choose one of your shots to frame and decorate with charms. That fee also includes a scan of your photos—you'll give an employee at the desk your email address and will receive a digital backup of your pics. The preview was incredibly popular (read: crowded), so if that's any indication, expect to wait in line for a bit outside, then to wait in an additional line for each individual photo booth. That being said, with my folder full of mementos that I'll likely hold onto forever, the wait ultimately felt worth it. The museum is on the corner of West Sunset Boulevard and Hyperion Avenue—a very central Silver Lake location—so there are lots of walkable spots in the surrounding blocks. Typically, a photo booth moment is a fun addendum to a night out, not the whole attraction. But I can see the Photo Booth Museum being a popular stop on girls' nights out—two people can fit into each booth comfortably, but more are welcome to squeeze in for a group shot. Or you could always pair a photo shoot with a few scoops at Salt & Straw or the adjacent Pazzo Gelato, followed by a pint at 33 Taps —sounds like the perfect summer date night. The Photo Booth Museum is located at 3827 West Sunset Boulevard. It's open daily from 1pm to 9pm. Admission is free, but analog booths cost $7.50, and the digital booth costs $6.50.