Southeast Overtown/Park West Community Redevelopment Agency presents Sepia Vernacular, an exhibition that places Overtown’s past back into public view. Drawn from the City of Miami Planning Department archives, the show features more than 80 rare photographs from the 1920s–1950s, including selections from Max Waldman’s 1947 Color Town series, documenting daily life across the streets, businesses, families, and social spaces that seldom make it into Miami’s official histories. The exhibition will be taking place at the newly restored Lawson E. Thomas Building, which once served as the office of Miami-Dade County’s first Black judge and a central figure in the city’s civil rights movement. A newly commissioned mural by Anthony Mojo Reed II adds contemporary context which, together with the archival photo exhibition, frames Overtown as essential to understanding Miami, not peripheral to it.

Sepia Vernacular: Overtown’s Photographic Journey, 1920–1950
Time Out says
Details
- Event website:
- www.seopwcra.com/sepia-vernacular
- Address
- Lawson E. Thomas Building
- Lawson E. Thomas Building
- 1021 NW 2nd Avenue
- Miami
- 33136
- Price:
- Free
- Opening hours:
- Thurs–Fri, 2-6 PM; Sat, 10am – 5pm
Dates and times
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