Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe and the Last Gullah Islands
Dec 5, 2024–Apr 2025
Since the early 1970s, artist, activist, and scholar Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe (b. 1951, Chicago, IL; lives and works in South Kent, CT) has made photographs that testify to the beauty and complexity of Black life, honoring the rhythms of the everyday and marking important rites of passage for the people who appear in them.
In 1977, following an earlier six-month independent study in West Africa, Moutoussamy-Ashe traveled back across the Atlantic Ocean to Daufuskie Island, which sits between Hilton Head, South Carolina, and Savannah, Georgia. There and on the other surrounding Sea Islands, she began making photographs among the Gullah Geechee—many of them descendants of the formerly enslaved people who acquired land from white plantation owners when they fled at the conclusion of the Civil War. For Moutoussamy-Ashe, these places, separated by the Atlantic, were inextricably linked, with the Sea Islands representing connective tissue within the Black diaspora; a place shaped by violent centuries of slavery and a community steadfast in the protection and nourishment of its unique culture and people. The Daufuskie Island photographs honor these entwined histories and the artist’s personal perspective. How images are made, cared for, and consumed are enduring concerns for the artist, who maintains, “Photography should force us to question ourselves and to question the environment in which we live.”
Drawn from the Whitney’s collection, this focused presentation includes a selection of Moutoussamy-Ashe’s black-and-white Daufuskie Island photographs and the artist’s related publications. Portraits of children and elders, images of homes and the shoreline, people at work and at rest, and church services together form an impression of a community—and a place—on the cusp of great change.
Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe and the Last Gullah Islands is organized by Kelly Long, Senior Curatorial Assistant.
The Bride, the Groom, and their Guests, Daufuskie Island, SC, 1980, printed 2022
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When Moutoussamy-Ashe made her photographs of Daufuskie, there were around just 80 permanent residents left on the island–roughly twice the number pictured in this group portrait of a wedding party. The destruction of Daufuskie’s cotton crop by the boll weevil in the early 1900s had a long-lasting impact on the island’s economy and infrastructure, and local jobs disappeared as pollution from the Savannah River contaminated its once-thriving oyster beds. By the 1970s, real estate developers were circling, emboldened by neighboring Hilton Head Island’s burgeoning reputation as a profitable tourist destination. Though an outsider, Moutoussamy-Ashe’s respect and gentle curiosity earned her the Daufuskie community’s trust. “Because the Daufuskie I photographed no longer exists,” she would later write, “I know now that these photos are an invaluable archive for the islanders and greater American society, which makes me confident that their trust was not misplaced.”