Celebrate Mother’s Day with Marianne Anderson and her fashions Lifestyle

Mother’s Day is a day of honoring and celebrating the figures of the mother in our lives. Around the figure of the mother, not just those who give birth to children. There are mothers who started the movement and gave birth to ideas, actions and hope. Martin Luther King Jr. saw Marianne Anderson as the mother of the greatest movements in history.
“According to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, he called her on the phone and invited her to the March on Washington. He said he chose the Lincoln Memorial because he was there on that faithful day as a child when Marian Anderson sang on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. He said he looked at her as the mother of the civil rights movement, ”said Gillian Partrisia Pirtl, director general of the Marianne Anderson Museum and Historical Society.
Marian Anderson was a mother of hope and a symbol of breaking down racial barriers, especially in music. Anderson became the first African-American to sing at the Metropolitan Opera in New York in 1955. In 1963, she sang at the March on Washington, where Martin Luther King delivered his famous speech, “I Have a Dream.” She was also the first African-American to perform at the White House a few years before the 1936 march. Her actions raised hopes that she would still be followed.
So, in celebrating Our Mother’s Day this weekend, Marian Anderson is a key person to be honored on Mother’s Day, not only for her civil rights and humanitarian efforts, but also for her style. To celebrate, the Penn Museum in partnership with the Marian Anderson Museum and Historical Society will present a day of empowerment, history and fashion with “Marian Anderson: Her Story in Style” on Saturday, May 7, 2022 from 1 p.m. 15:00 to 15:00 Tea and light snacks will be offered after the presentation.
According to Pirtl, visitors will have access to the exclusive archives of the Marian Anderson Collection and will be able to see her exquisite wedding dress, rarely seen by the public in Philadelphia, where Marian was born and where the founder of Mother’s Day, Anne Jarvis, lived.
“It will be just beautiful, and we will have an additional surprise: an extra dress for the performance, beautiful artifacts, and you will also have the opportunity with this presentation to see beautiful, beautiful and rare photos that will depict Marian Anderson’s Life as a style icon.” says Pirtl. The cost of the event is $ 20 per person, which includes admission to the Penn Museum for the whole day and tea with light snacks. As a gift for Mother’s Day from the museum you can get two tickets for $ 35.
The Penn Museum is also constantly showcasing Anderson’s velvet merlot dress at the Stories We Wear exhibition. Throughout May, the museum offers all mothers a free gift from the Museum Shop just for visiting. Mom can choose from three gifts inspired by the Penn Museum collections. Appetizing Taza chocolate discs made from the best cocoa from Mexico, Native Northwest coin purses with images of works created by indigenous artists, each with their own name and tribal affiliation, or Iznik tin soap dishes inspired by designer patterns from all over the world.
“So if Marian Anderson was a mother, and also was a mother to all of us musically, then, according to the Rev. Martin Luther King, the Mother of the Civil Rights Movement. I don’t know the best mother you can be to represent America in the civil rights movement, trying to give people freedom, justice, freedom, peace and uplift our race and our people, ”Pirtl said.
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