Labat: A Creole Legacy Project Records
Object Details
- Scope and Contents note
- The Labat: A Creole Legacy project records, 2001-2004, contain material related to the creation of the Labat: A Creole Legacy quilt. The quilt, based on the life and family history of Celestine Labat, was created by the artist Lori K. Gordon and acquired by the Smithsonian Institution in 2004. Series 1: Writings contains correspondence, writings, notes, and speeches by Gordon her life, work, and research on Labat family history, and friendship with Labat. Series 2: Interview Transcripts consist of transcripts of Gordon's interviews of Labat. Series 3: Printed Materials consists of newspaper clippings and artwork related to Labat, Gordon, and the quilt. Series 4: Audiovisual Materials consists of 21 audiocassettes and 4 videocassettes containing interview material. Series 5: Digital Materials consists of 1 floppy disk and 3 CDs containing images and documents related to creation of the quilt.
- Biographical/Historical note
- Biography of Celestine Labat -- Celestine Labat (1898-2002), educator and traveler, was born and raised in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, in a large Creole family. Her mother Leonora Fayard was a homemaker, and her father Joseph Labat, known as "Papa Joe," was a builder and engineer. Celestine Labat's education would have been limited to eighth grade due to racial discrimination, but she moved to Indianapolis and did domestic work in order to finish high school. Upon graduation, she returned to Mississippi and became a secondary school teacher. After a decade of teaching, her desire for higher education prompted a move to Washington, DC, where she attained a bachelor's degree in science during the years of WWII. She continued teaching, moving to San Antonio, Texas, then Los Angeles, California, where she got her master's degree in education at the University of Southern California. She again returned to Mississippi and taught at St. Augustine Seminary for twenty years before retiring at age 72. She remained active until the last years of her life, and at age 102 was the featured speaker at a Hancock County Historical Society luncheon where she met artist Lori K. Gordon. Their collaboration lasted until her death in 2002. Biography of Lori K. Gordon -- Lori K. Gordon (1958-), visual artist, is originally from eastern South Dakota but now makes her home in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. Her work reflects her interest in social issues and her environment, such as the "Katrina Collection," in which Gordon made art from found objects after her studio and community were devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Her meeting with Celestine Labat in 2000 was the start of a friendship and collaboration that resulted in the art quilt, "Labat: A Creole Legacy," acquired in 2004 by the Smithsonian institution. Gordon's work spans arts forms including sculpture, collage, and painting, and is in public and private collections around the world. She is also the founder and president of Six Degrees Consortium, a nonprofit organization created to "enable the creation and dissemination of works of art that are socially relevant, timely, build bridges across cultures and that address the issues faced by humans in an ever-shrinking world."
- Date
- 2001-2004
- Extent
- 1.31 Linear feet (2 boxes; audiocassettes, videocassettes, floppy disk, CDs)
- Provenance
- The Labat: A Creole Legacy project records were donated to the Anacostia Community Museum in 2004 by Lori K. Gordon.
- Rights
- The Labat: A Creole Legacy project records are the physical property of the Anacostia Community Museum. Literary and copyright belong to Lori K. Gordon or their legal heirs and assigns. For further information contact the Museum Archives.
- Citation
- Labat: A Creole Legacy Project records, Anacostia Community Museum Archives, Smithsonian Institution, gift of Lori K. Gordon.
- Type
- Collection descriptions
- Archival materials
- Transcripts
- Clippings
- Postcards
- Videocassettes
- Audiocassettes
- Oral histories (document genres)
- Floppy disks
- Cd-roms
- Articles
- Vhs (videotape format)
- Topic
- African American families
- African American women educators
- African American women
- African Americans -- Race identity
- Creoles
- Place
- Mississippi
- Identifier
- ACMA.06-082
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There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
- "Hancock Quilt Going to Smithsonian," Sun Herald
- "Labat: A Creole Legacy," Focus
- "Local Ice Man Shoots Negro Employee of Scharff's Grocery," Sea Coast Echo
- "A stitch in time," Southern Style
- "Patchwork of family history," Sun Herald
- "Celestine Labat, 1898-2003," Sea Coast Echo
- "St. Rose to debut new festival poster during Second Saturday," Sea Coast Echo
- "'Labat: A Creole Legacy' draws students from along Gulf Coast," Sea Coast Echo
- "Smithsonian to exhibit 'Labat: A Creole Legacy,'" Sea Coast Echo
- "St. Rose de Lima's Commemorative Fair Poster," Hancock Focus
- "Featured Artist: Lori Gordon," Bay Press
- "Deadwood artist to be featured in Smithsonian Institution," Black Hills Pioneer
- "Art abounds at the St. Rose de Lima silent auction for the 77th annual Church Fair," Sea Coast Echo
- "The Life of Miss Celestine Labat," Sea Coast Echo