Sat. Feb 8th, 2025

Boxes of different designs and colors from the Soul Box project, Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum on February 7, 2025. | Erick Díaz Veliz

Nearly two years after the Feb. 13, 2023, mass shooting at Michigan State University, the Eli & Edythe Broad Art Museum on campus hosted a Friday opening of a new exhibition, “Art in the Aftermath: Healing Gun Violence through Artivism.”

The exhibition will be on display until Thursday, which marks the two-year anniversary of the shooting that killed students Brian Fraser, Arielle Anderson and Alexandria Verner, and injured five people. A community resource fair at the exhibition is being held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.

Works about gun violence and its victims are featured, created by survivors and activists, including MSU professor Marco Díaz Muñoz, whose classroom in Berkey Hall was a site of the 2023 shooting. and Manuel Oliver, who lost his son, Joaquin. in the 2018 Parkland, Fla., school shooting. Artwork from former Beatles drummer Ringo Starr’s famous piece Right Gun (Knot for Violence) is also part of the show.

The centerpiece of the show is “The Soul Box Project,” an interactive installation featuring “soul boxes” from community members reflecting their experiences with gun violence and their hopes for healing. Attendees are invited to create their own soul box on site.

MSU professor Scott Boehm and End Gun Violence Michigan organizer and MSU alumna Maya Manuel are co-curators of the exhibition.

“The pain and trauma from gun violence never really goes away, but we can work to change what it means to us. Art and activism have both been important ways for me and others to turn our pain into power. I want survivors everywhere to know: You’re not alone,” said Manuel.

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