Since 2019, Monument Lab has been working in collaboration with the New Jersey Historical Commission and the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, both divisions of the New Jersey Department of State, to envision and develop a multi-site public art and history project to mark the 250th anniversary of the formal founding of the United States in 2026. Under New Jersey’s larger initiative to mark this anniversary, Revolution NJ, this project engages numerous historic sites related to the Revolution and explores how they could be remembered, connected, and layered with other historical narratives in the contemporary landscape of New Jersey.
We began the process of proposal design by hosting an exploratory artistic research residency. The research residency brought together an invited cohort of 9 New Jersey-based practitioners including Tyrese Gould Jacinto, Elaine Buck & Beverly Mills, the Harriet Tubman Museum, Sankofa Stitchers (Juandamarie Gikandi & Mada Galloway), Kristyn Scorsone, Wendel White, Amber Wiley, Marisa Williamson, and Layqa Nuna Yawarto to reflect on the multiple genealogies of the American Revolution, legacies of Indigenous and African American historical figures and stories, and connections to contemporary revolutionary movements.
Research residents were invited based on previous critical and creative work on the Revolution, as well as other participatory and contemporary approaches to art and history. As a deliverable, each resident was to produce a written and visual site-specific case study of a revolutionary site in their own community or that is important to their life’s work. This report reflects their key findings, summaries of their independent projects, and insights into how this brain trust inspired a new path for Monument Lab to come together for revolutionary pasts and futures.