Martin Luther King, Jr., Montgomery / Are you tired?

© Burton Philip Silverman/ VAGA for ARS, New York, NY. Photograph and digital image © Delaware …
© Burton Philip Silverman/ VAGA for ARS, New York, NY
Martin Luther King, Jr., Montgomery / Are you tired?
© Burton Philip Silverman/ VAGA for ARS, New York, NY. Photograph and digital image © Delaware Art Museum. Not for reproduction or publication.

Martin Luther King, Jr., Montgomery / Are you tired?

Date1956
Artist (American painter, illustrator, born 1928)
MediumGraphite on paper
Dimensionssheet: 11 1/16 × 10 13/16 in. (28.1 × 27.5 cm)
Credit LineF. V. du Pont Acquisition Fund, 1993
Object number1993-25
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsDRAWING
Label TextIn 1956, New York artist Burton Silverman and his fellow artist Harvey Dinnerstein recorded events of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, initiated when Rosa Parks, an African American woman, refused to give up her seat to a white man on the racially segregated city bus system. Together Silverman and Dinnerstein made over 90 reportorial drawings of the activities and people involved in the Boycott, including the twenty‑six year old Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Several of the drawings were published in magazines and exhibited in museums. The artists stated: “Our decision to record the events, as artists, was motivated in part by the virtual absence of photographic recording of the Boycott. We felt that this was the first real opportunity to show the efficacy of the artist's eye in evoking the emotional as well as factual realities of an important human event.”


The phrase inscribed with the image of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., alludes to his speech to almost 5,000 people at the Holt Street Baptist Church in Montgomery on December 5, 1955, four days after Rosa Parks' arrest.

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