In 2019, the Last Supper Sculpture was rediscovered behind a temporary dry wall at the Studio Acting Conservatory, formerly New Home Baptist Church, in the Columbia Heights community in Washington, D.C. This discovery ignited and renewed cultural conversations concerning the centering of Black life in general, and Black religious life in particular.

About the Exhibition

  • When: Ongoing
  • Where: Digital
  • Curator: Teddy Reeves

Last Supper Sculpture 3D AR Experience

 

The Center for the Study of African American Religious Life worked with the Smithsonian 3D Digitization Office to create a special 3D AR component for the Sculpture. This experience allows you to hang this impressive work of art on your own wall! 
 

Smithsonian Institution

Augmented reality (AR) is a technology that allows us to experience virtual objects in our real-world space as viewed through a cellphone or other mobile device. The screen displays your environment through its camera and superimposes the virtual object on top. As you move around the object, it stays in place as if it were actually there with you. Some solutions even include virtual shadows and lighting to match your space. The Smithsonian 3D team has created an AR solution that works directly from your web browser, no apps or downloads required. Within the AR Last Supper Sculpture experience, visitors are able to learn (through two tours) about the history of the sculpture, the artist, the rediscovery and 3D imaging process, and more. 

Instructions to engage with 3D AR Model

  1. On your mobile device, tap the AR button in the upper left corner of the 3D experience window.
  2. You'll see a prompt to wave your phone around. This allows your device to scan the environment and find a suitable area to place the AR object. Finding walls is a particular challenge for AR technologies, so be persistent! 
  3. Once a wall is found, the object will be placed on it. The mural is quite large so it will initially appear at 20% scale. Use a pinch motion to scale the model up to see its true size!

Select an area to view more


About the Artist

Akili Ron Anderson

AfriCOBRA artist Akili Ron Anderson used men, women, and children from the congregation of New Home Baptist Church as inspiration for the disciples’ faces, creating a work of art that invites everyone to the table. The sculpture is an aesthetic testimony to the importance of seeing oneself in one’s environment.

Watch the full Akili Ron Anderson Oral History

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Akili Ron Anderson Full Oral History Interview

National Museum of African American History and Culture
I think it’s important for black children sitting in churches all over this country on Sunday morning to look up at the windows, look up at images and see themselves and believe that they can ascend to heaven, too. Akili Ron Anderson Sculptor

Black Christ in 21st Century Media

Creating Black Christ in the 21st century requires a reimagining and a replacement of the religious and societal image of a European man with light eyes and long-flowing light-colored hair that has existed for centuries.

Constructing Black Messiahs

In the 1960s, during the civil rights movement, as protest erupted over desegregation and equal rights; there was another dispute brewing over the “true” face of Jesus. With billions of replicates of what was known as the central figure of the Christian faith, the white Christ, African Americans, and other minorities began to grapple with whether it was reasonable or sensible to worship and esteem a blue-eyed, white God, particularly as several religious scholars began to research, present, and publish materials that indicated Jesus’ presence in Africa.

We use the video player Able Player to provide captions and audio descriptions. Able Player performs best using web browsers Google Chrome, Firefox, and Edge. If you are using Safari as your browser, use the play button to continue the video after each audio description. We apologize for the inconvenience.

In his 2021 song, Jesus in the Ghetto featuring Anthony Hamilton, Grammy winning Hip-Hop Chaplain, Sir the Baptist raps about an accessible Christ—connecting Jesus’ heritage and racial identity to the everyday concerns of people living on the margins of society. Through his lyrics, Sir ask the questions, “What if you could see Jesus as a peer sharing the same struggles. Would it make you more confident in your belief?”

In the official video documentary for the single, which aired on REVOLT TV, features NMAAHC Curator of Religion, Dr. Teddy Reeves, and Pastor John Gray.



Searchable Museum

Marvin Gaye on Stage

Spirit in the Dark

Sometimes in the foreground, sometimes in the background, at times in the shadows—but always somewhere in the frame—religion is essential to the story of Black America. The photographs and stories in this exhibition, drawn from the Johnson Publishing Company archive, reflect diverse aspects of the Black religious experience and testify to religion's role in the struggle for human dignity and social equality.
Explore more in Searchable Museum about Spirit in the Dark

Publications

Cover of "Movements, Motions, Moments" featuring the title in an orange block at the top and an image of four women standing in the water.

Double Exposure Vol. VIII - Movements, Motions, Moments

Movements, Motions, Moments draws upon the photography collection at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture to explore the dynamic ways African Americans engage in and practice religion and spirituality.
Read More about Double Exposure Vol. VIII - Movements, Motions, Moments

Explore the Collection

Miniature Black Madonna

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Alan Laird
View the Object about Miniature Black Madonna

Black Theology & Black Power

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Anonymous Gift,
© James Cone
View the Collection about Black Theology & Black Power

Untitled

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of John H. White/Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photojournalist
View the Object about Untitled

This exhibition is presented by the Center for the Study of African American Religious Life (CSAARL) and generously funded by the Lilly Endowment Inc.

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