Critical Grooves Book Lab

May 08, 2025, 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Listed In: Talks and Screenings

May 8: Native Son by Richard Wright

Plains Art Museum invites you to join the eighth (8th) iteration of Critical Grooves Book Lab, where we explore four extraordinary books through the lens of art, culture, and social reflection, and their linkages to the museum’s current exhibitions. Ages 16+ are welcomed, FREE.

We begin with Isabel Wilkerson’s The Warmth of Other Suns, which chronicles the Great Migration and resonates with Anne Labovitz’s exhibition exploring themes of well-being, resilience, and connection. We then move onto Percival Everett’s So Much Blue—a richly layered novel about an artist navigating memory, secrecy, and creativity—which creates a dynamic dialogue with Don Powell’s A Little Grey for Color, examining the emotional resonance of design and architecture. Gayl Jones’s The Healing, a lyrical tale of reclamation and transformation through a mysterious faith healer, converges with the energy of Jaque Fragua’s Ghost Writing, where layered expressions of history and spirituality unfold. Finally, we close with Richard Wright’s Native Son, a searing exploration of systemic inequality and structuring narratives in mid-20th century America, which powerfully aligns with Mickey Smith’s examination of history, text, and media in shaping public and private identities. Whether you’re new to these authors or revisiting their works, join us at Plains Art Museum for engaging discussions and reflections, with hot tea, hot chocolate, and/or your own snacks and beverages.

To encourage broad participation, you may acquire the selected texts through convenient means, as per your situation. Also note: Critical Grooves Book Lab selections will also be available for purchase from The Store at Plains Art Museum.

For more information and/or participation contact Dr. Kelvin Monroe kmonroe@plainsart.org.


Events Calendar

December 2016

Other Exhibitions

Rimer Cardillo

August 23, 2025 - February 08, 2026
Deep Ecologies / Sacred Natures / Temporal Geographies 

For more than five decades, Rimer Cardillo’s artwork has offered a powerful commentary on the intersection of politics, economics, and ecological degradation. Since the late 1970s, his practice has focused on the devastating impacts of human activity on the natural world, particularly the alarming decline in animal species and plant life.

View Exhibition

FMVA Constraint

April 26, 2025 - June 08, 2025
What Do You Think It Looks Like?   

Every other year, the Fargo-Moorhead Visual Artists (FMVA) invites its member artists to respond to a creative challenge tied to a specific theme. For this edition of Constraint, artists were asked: What Do You Think It Looks Like?

View Exhibition