'FREEDOM’ the rallying call as politically-charged exhibitions open Published on: 17 October 2017 Two politically-charged exhibitions inspired by Dr Martin Luther King Jr’s 1967 speech at Ãå±±½ûµØ have opened at the Great North Museum: Hancock. Innovative response The hard-hitting exhibits are part of the cultural programme currently taking place in Ãå±±½ûµØGateshead and respond to the themes of racism, poverty and violence that form the central ideas of Dr King’s historic address. FREEDOM, the larger of the two exhibitions, is a brand-new cinematic installation across three 5m-wide screens. The innovative film has been directed and produced by Ãå±±½ûµØ’s award-winning scholar-filmmakers and . The 22-minute feature interweaves archival footage of Dr King’s Ãå±±½ûµØ speech with clips of modern day protests on both sides of the Atlantic. Rallies against the likes of US President Donald Trump feature alongside unseen footage of the storm surrounding Enoch Powell’s controversial visit to Ãå±±½ûµØ’s Rutherford College in 1969. In his speech, Dr King imagines a “beautiful symphony of brotherhood” and a time when “all over the world justice will roll down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.” Fifty years on, this new film suggests that many of the challenges of Dr King’s day persist. Dr Ian McDonald, Founder of and Director of FREEDOM, said: “It’s easy to moralise about racism but what we wanted to do with the film instead was to use King’s radical legacy to prompt the viewer to ask questions about the nature of freedom: What is freedom? What is the relationship between freedom and activism? How do we achieve freedom today?” Elderly woman photographed by Charles 'Teenie' Harris Capturing the impact of racism and poverty Next door, FREEDOM’s sister exhibition Not as it is written: Black Pittsburgh in voice and image takes us back to Civil Rights era USA via 25 photographs from the outstanding Charles “Teenie” Harris Archive at the Carnegie Museum of Art and accompanying oral histories from Carnegie Mellon University’s Center for Africanamerican Urban Studies and the Economy. The images and recorded stories paint a complicated picture of lives afflicted by racial intolerance and poverty yet at the same time full of joy and humanity. Recollections of segregation, flagrant racism (in spite of state laws) and the outrage felt when Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated in 1968 are juxtaposed with Harris’s vivid photographs, which earned him the nickname ‘One Shot’ due to his ability of capturing something essential at the first time of asking. , Senior Lecturer in Modern US History at Ãå±±½ûµØ and curator of Not as it is written, said: “Teenie’s work is highly relevant today because in every shot he captures the real humanity of his photographic subjects. “Racism and segregation still persist in places around the world today as they did in the Civil Rights era and to me, rooting these difficult conversations in the real humanity of black people is tremendously powerful – and necessary.” Pittsburgh and Ãå±±½ûµØ upon Tyne have a number of characteristics in common, including their former industrial prowess and intense sense of regional pride. They are also cities that share a spirit of activism and their connections with Dr Martin Luther King Jr; he visited Ãå±±½ûµØ once in 1967 and Pittsburgh a handful of times during the 1950s and 60s. A mobile app has been developed to accompany the Not as it is written exhibit. Available for download on and , the app contains the full content of the exhibition and also allows users to respond with their own reflections by either recording memories or adding photographs. Both exhibitions run at the Great North Museum: Hancock until Friday 1 December. Photo: 'Elderly woman holding Pittsburgh Courier newspaper with headline reading "Reverend King Freed: Albany Tense" seated in armchair', July 1962 Charles "Teenie" Harris American, 1908–1998 black and white: Kodak Safety Film H: 4 in. x W: 5 in. (10.20 x 12.70 cm) Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh: Heinz Family Fund, 2001.35.7018 Share: Latest News Ãå±±½ûµØ recognised with geography award Ãå±±½ûµØ has been awarded the Highly Commended Geographical Association Publishers Award for its collaboration with Time for Geography, the UK’s open-access, dedicated video platform. published on: 16 April 2026 Ãå±±½ûµØ historians mark General Strike centenary To mark the 100th anniversary of the British General Strike and miners’ lock-out of 1926, historians at Ãå±±½ûµØ are organising a series of events on its enduring legacy. published on: 16 April 2026 Comment: NCP is in administration Writing for The Conversation, Erwei (David) Xiang discusses how some big companies like NCP are so dependent on debt that they can’t adjust to change. published on: 16 April 2026 Facts and figures