ATLANTA, GA.- American artist Faith Ringgold (1930-2024) is widely known and celebrated for her paintings and multimedia art, including narrative quilts. However, her award-winning accomplishments as a childrens book creator are often less well known. This summer, the High Museum of Art will present Faith Ringgold: Seeing Children (June 27-Oct. 12, 2025), the most comprehensive exhibition to date of Ringgolds original paintings and drawings made for her childrens books, including several artworks that have never previously been exhibited. The exhibition will be the latest in the Highs popular series celebrating childrens book art and authors.
🧵
Discover the vibrant narratives of Faith Ringgold's art! Shop her compelling books on Amazon.
At the High, weve distinguished ourselves as champions of childrens book art, which we know inspires creativity, fosters learning and engenders empathy among our youngest visitors, said Rand Suffolk, the Highs director. Faith Ringgolds books continue to be read in homes and classrooms across the United States, and their illustrations are remarkable artistic achievements. For many years weve had the pleasure of presenting her quilts in our collection, but with this exhibition, we are uplifting this equally important work and offering a new window into Ringgolds life and artistry.
🎨
Love ArtDaily? Support independent art journalism! Donate via PayPal or become a patron on Patreon today.
The exhibition will feature more than 100 works from a dozen of Ringgolds books, including original paintings from If a Bus Could Talk: The Story of Rosa Parks (1999), Dinner at Aunt Connies House (1993) and Tar Beach (1991), in which Cassie, a Black child in 1930s Harlem, imagines a future where she can go anywhere that she dreams of from her apartments rooftop. Also on view will be complete artwork from the fable The Invisible Princess (1999) and We Came to America (2016), which examines the history of immigration in America. Together, the artworks in the exhibition illuminate critical aspects of Ringgolds practice and convey how Ringgold, a lifelong educator, presents children as creative, purposeful art makers.
The exhibitions title, Seeing Children, signals three themes that weave throughout Ringgolds books and will be explored in the exhibition: an adults capacity to see children, childrens ability to see themselves and their world, and the possibility of children imagining a world beyond what adults can see. Across three sections American Histories, Stories We Tell and American People the exhibition will consider the role of children, particularly Black children, in American society and how children, like those in Ringgolds books, can cultivate more equitable, hopeful possibilities for their future.
Faith Ringgold started her career as a teacher and believed that all children are artists and should seriously consume art. Often a child will first encounter visual art on the pages of picture books, and they can help children feel valued and empowered, said Andrew Westover, exhibition curator and the Highs Eleanor McDonald Storza deputy director of learning and civic engagement. Through this exhibition, we will underscore the importance of those discoveries while at the same time giving due recognition to a lesser-known facet of Ringgolds art. Were creating an incredibly rich experience that we cant wait to share with Atlanta.
In conjunction with the exhibition, the Alliance Theatre at the Woodruff Arts Center, of which the High is also an arts partner, will present Rhythm & Thread (June-August 2025), a theatrical show for young audiences inspired by Faith Ringgolds quilts that will celebrate family, imagination and the beauty of storytelling through the art of quilting. Created by Andrea Washington, the show will feature the artistry of Marquetta Johnson and an original jazz score by Eugene H. Russell IV. Part of the Alliances Bernhardt Theatre for the Very Young series, this production is specially designed for audiences under 5 years old and their caregivers.
Faith Ringgold: Seeing Children will be presented in the Special Exhibition Galleries on the Second Level of the Highs Stent Family Wing.
Artdaily participates in the Amazon Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn commissions by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. When you purchase through our links, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. These commissions help us continue curating and sharing the art worlds latest news, stories, and resources with our readers.