lynda andrews-barry designs - “Forever Free”, sculpted by Edmonia Lewis who was born a free woman on July 4, 1844. Fabricated in 1867, this monumental marble masterpiece represents the emancipation of African-American
![Sculpture at the Ends of Slavery (Volume 9) (The Phillips Collection Book Prize Series): Beach, Caitlin Meehye: 9780520343269: Amazon.com: Books Sculpture at the Ends of Slavery (Volume 9) (The Phillips Collection Book Prize Series): Beach, Caitlin Meehye: 9780520343269: Amazon.com: Books](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41z7iVYb-IL._SR600%2C315_PIWhiteStrip%2CBottomLeft%2C0%2C35_SCLZZZZZZZ_FMpng_BG255%2C255%2C255.jpg)
Sculpture at the Ends of Slavery (Volume 9) (The Phillips Collection Book Prize Series): Beach, Caitlin Meehye: 9780520343269: Amazon.com: Books
Samantha Galina on Twitter: "Edmonia Lewis' sculpture 'Forever Free' (1867) embodies the term intersectionality, long before the term was coined. Lewis depicts a standing free black man with a kneeling black woman,
![MARY EDMONIA LEWIS: AFRICAN AMERICAN VISUAL ARTISTS–ACHIEVEMENTS–SERIES 14–(Part 1 of 3) – POSITIVE IMAGINATION, INC. MARY EDMONIA LEWIS: AFRICAN AMERICAN VISUAL ARTISTS–ACHIEVEMENTS–SERIES 14–(Part 1 of 3) – POSITIVE IMAGINATION, INC.](https://positiveimaginationblog.files.wordpress.com/2017/02/img_0580.jpg?w=748)