The work comes from a project Awol did for The New Yorker, profiling the legendary costume designer Ruth E. Carter who has worked on all of Spike Lee’s films, “Black...
The work comes from a project Awol did for The New Yorker, profiling the legendary costume designer Ruth E. Carter who has worked on all of Spike Lee’s films, “Black Panther”, “Malcom X”, “Amistad”, “Selma” and more; see here: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/09/10/ruth-e-carters-threads-of-history. In this shoot he used her actual costumes and reimagined them using his own unique lexicon and stage setting. In this work he depicts a group of young girls skipping around a Nefertiti bust in their ‘Sunday Best’ – the actual dresses worn in the movie “Selma” by the four girls playing those involved in the 1963 Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama.