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Join the Amistad Center for Art & Culture at the Wadsworth Atheneum for an afternoon of African drumming, storytelling, and crafts on Saturday, February 26 at 2 p.m. Recommended for children age 10 and under. Space is limited. Register today to reserve your seat.

For more information and to register, go to: Amistad on the Go: Children’s African Drumming, Storytelling and Crafts | The Amistad Center

Funding for Amistad on the Go has been generously provided by the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving. 

About the Amistad Center

In 1987, a handful of visionaries that included Trustees and staff of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, joined forces with independent foundations, corporations and the State of Connecticut and formed The Amistad Foundation in order to purchase, protect and provide public access to the Randolph Linsly Simpson Collection then housed in the collector’s farmhouse in Northford, Connecticut.

This extraordinary collection, which now consists of 7,000 works of art, artifacts and archives, documents more than 300 years of the artistic, literary, military, enslaved and free life of Blacks in America–truly a treasure and a rich resource of immense educational value and testimony to America’s diverse and dynamic culture.

In addition to collection care and development, The Amistad Foundation was intended to take on the broader tasks of preserving and interpreting African American culture and history and correcting the misrepresentation and under-representation of this important aspect of our country’s evolution.

This project was made possible through funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and administered by the Connecticut State Library on behalf of the Connecticut State Historical Records Advisory Board and Conservation ConneCTion.