Plain Site Project Lecture Series - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 2109734

Plain Site Project Lecture Series

author on Jul 30, 2020

The Arts Center at Duck Creek is pleased to announce the Plain Sight Lecture Series consisting of three talks throughout the month of August, presented by David Rattray and Donnamarie Barnes of the Plain Sight Project.

These lectures will be held outdoors and are free, but seating is limited and reservations are required at duckcreekarts@gmail.com. In compliance with NY State Covid restrictions, all guests on the property must practice social distancing at all times.

Along with many northern communities, East Hampton is disconnected from its slave-owning past. By compiling a comprehensive, public list of enslaved persons from the Colonial period to the last recorded enslaved person in East Hampton in 1830, the Plain Sight Project is reconciling with this forgotten history while taking a step to place these people and their stories back into our nation's founding narrative with outreach to public and private schools.

On Saturday, August 1, at 5 p.m. Barnes and David Rattray will give an overview of the project in an hour-long talk about the history of slavery in Colonial North America. They will share their research data and individual stories of enslaved people on the East End in the mid-17th century. They will also reveal their personal relationships to the subject of enslaved people in the area and how their combined archives became a catalyst for the Plain Sight Project.

On Saturday, August 15, at 5 p.m., Barnes and Rattray will be joined by author Jeffrey Colvin to discuss how his recent novel “Africaville,” which tells the story of three generations of a family in a small Nova Scotia town settled in the 1800s by the freed slaves from the Caribbean and United States. They will relate to the stories in his book to those of enslaved people on the East End and share their thoughts on how both his “Out of the Loop” installation at Duck Creek and their Plain Sight Project seek to support our “national will to do better.” Colvin’s “Out of the Loop” installation on the grounds at Duck Creek will be on view Saturday and Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. This talk and Colvin’s installation at Duck Creek are part of “Present Tense: Black Lives Matter(ed),” a series of programs surrounding Colvin’s book, including a staged reading at Guild Hall in East Hampton and a panel discussion at The Church in Sag Harbor. Free copies of Africaville will be given to the first 15 people to reseve for this lecture. Books can be collected at the lecture.

On Saturday, August 29, at 5 p.m., Barnes and Rattray discuss the end of slavery in the North, and their goal to make the Plain Sight Project a template for groups and individuals in the Upper Mid-Atlantic, New York State and New England regions who want to develop their own archives of enslaved persons. the future of the Plain Sight Project.

They hope this project will create a granular national database that can used to understand the relative presence and location of enslaved persons in the region through time, and that the names of the enslaved will be honored and their stories inserted back into our shared history.

Donnamarie Barnes, chair of the Plain Site Project, is the curator and archivist of Sylvester Manor Educational Farm on Shelter Island. She has spent over 30 years working in the editorial photography field as a photographer and photo editor for publications such as People and Essence Magazines and as an editor at the Gamma Liaison photo agency. A life-long summer and full-time resident of the SANS Community in Sag Harbor, she curated a highly-acclaimed historic tintype photography exhibition in 2015 at the Eastville Community Historical Society entitled, " Collective Identity

David Rattray, founder of the Plain Sight Project, is the editor of the East Hampton Star. He is the fifth member of the Rattray family over three generations to have held the post.

The Arts Center at Duck Creek is at 127 Squaw Road in East Hampton. For details, visit duckcreekarts.org.

You May Also Like:

Take a Chance on ‘ARRIVAL From Sweden’ at The Suffolk

The glitter, the glamour, the unmistakable harmonies of ABBA are coming to The Suffolk when ... 25 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

Hunt Slonem’s Joyful Menagerie Fills the Grenning Gallery

The Grenning Gallery is currently presenting its annual solo exhibition of celebrated painter Hunt Slonem, ... 24 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

A New Perspective on Gaslighting: 'Deceived' Reimagines Classic Tale at Bay Street

The term “gaslighting” is defined as manipulation using psychological methods in order to make someone ... by Michelle Trauring

‘Hamptons Summer Songbook By The Sea’ Brings Broadway and Cabaret Stars to LTV This Summer

LTV Studios is set to transform its industrial-chic television space into an intimate concert venue ... by Staff Writer

McCartney Magic Returns: 'Live and Let Die' Recreates Beatlemania at The Suffolk

The Suffolk welcomes back “Live and Let Die: The Music of Paul McCartney” for two ... by Staff Writer

Roberta Piket Brings Jazz Mastery to LTV’s McIver Piano Series

Acclaimed jazz pianist Roberta Piket will headline the McIver Piano Jazz Series at LTV Studios on Monday, July 7, at 6 p.m., offering an intimate solo performance as part of Hamptons JazzFest. The McIver series invites audiences into the LTV Piano Lounge for up-close evenings of music and conversation with jazz piano greats. Piket, a Queens native and daughter of Viennese composer Frederick Piket, brings a dynamic blend of tradition and innovation to the keys. Known for her stylistic versatility, she moves effortlessly between straight-ahead swing, post-bop and the avant-garde. A respected bandleader and composer, Piket studied at Tufts University ... by Staff Writer

PBS Documentary ‘The Bonackers’ Screens June 29 in Springs for Library’s 50th Anniversary

“The Bonackers,” the acclaimed PBS documentary exploring the lives and legacy of East Hampton’s storied ... 23 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

Bay Street Theater Announces Cast and Crew for ‘Deceived’ and ‘Bonnie & Clyde’

Bay Street Theater has unveiled the complete cast and creative teams for its next two mainstage productions: the noir psychological thriller “Deceived,” which runs June 24 to July 20, and the pulse-pounding musical “Bonnie & Clyde” which takes the stage from July 29 to August 24. Directed by Tony Award-nominee Sheryl Kaller, “‘Deceived’ is a chilling new adaptation of Patrick Hamilton’s “Gaslight,” reimagined by playwrights Johnna Wright and Patty Jamieson. The cast features Mary Bacon (“Coal Country,” “Boardwalk Empire”), Briana Carlson-Goodman (“Les Misérables,” “Hair”), Olivia Cygan (“Doubt,” Steppenwolf Theatre) and Sam Gravitte (“Wicked”). Scenic design is by Jason Ardizzone-West, with ... by Staff Writer

Choral Society Explores Love and Legacy in ‘Songs From the Heart’

The Choral Society of the Hamptons will present “Songs From the Heart,” a concert that explores a rich emotional and musical landscape through works of varied genres and eras, at the Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church on Sunday, June 29, at 5:30 p.m. Under the direction of resident conductor Judith Clurman, the concert will feature a blend of choral music scored for string quartet and piano. The chorus will be joined by the CSH String Quartet — Song-A Cho, Ann Bermont, Christopher Shaughnessy, James Acomporo — and pianist Jeremy Robbin Lyons. Featured soloists for the evening include Amy Justman, Heather Jones, Jason ... by Staff Writer

‘Spider Couple: Psychoanalysis and Animal Imagery in Louise Bourgeois’s Work’ Explored at The Church

The Church will host an intimate afternoon of art, psychoanalysis and dialogue on Sunday, July ... by Staff Writer