Selma Is Now

Civil Rights Photographs by Spider Martin

February 28 through June 1, 2025

On view in the Atrium, Blackmon, and Weil Galleries

Overview

On February 18, 1965, Jimmie Lee Jackson, a demonstrator in Marion, Alabama, was shot and killed while protesting for equal voting rights. At the same time, 25-year-old James “Spider” Martin, a staff photographer for The Birmingham News, was sent to cover the events that unfolded. This pivotal event prompted an organized fight for civil rights in the South and Martin’s photography would help this effort become national, front page news.   

Martin would go on to cover the entire Selma to Montgomery march and other voting rights events, including Bloody Sunday and Turnaround Tuesday. Despite protests from his employers, he was dedicated to showing the world the fight for equal rights happening in his home state of Alabama. Walking from Selma to Montgomery “backward,” Martin was always a step ahead of the demonstrators, capturing their emotions and heroic efforts through the lens of his camera.   

All photographs in this exhibition are archival pigment print reproductions of Martin’s original negatives. These images were reprinted by photographer Karen Graffeo in 2023. Martin’s negatives date to 1965 and are held in the collection of The Briscoe Center for American History, Austin, Texas. Copyright is held by Tracy Martin, Birmingham, Alabama.   

Above: Spider Martin (American, 1939-2003), Exuberant joyful marchers make their way with bags and suitcases in hand on the first day of the long 54-mile march to Montgomery, March 21, 1965, archival pigment print on paper, Collection of Doug McCraw. ©2024 Spider Martin

Walking from Selma to Montgomery “backward,” Martin was always a step ahead of the demonstrators, capturing their emotions and heroic efforts through the lens of his camera.   

Organizers

Organized by Doug McCraw, Collector, Founder of FATVillage, IMX3, Fort Lauderdale, FL, and the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts. 

Exhibition Sponsors

Annual support for exhibitions is made possible by the following sponsors and grantors: 

Lead Sponsors and Grantors: Alabama State Council on the Arts, Art Bridges Foundation, Carr, Riggs & Ingram, LLC, Mr. and Mrs. Barrie H. Harmon, Ill, Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama, LLC, Lamar Advertising of Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. James K. Lowder, Poarch Band of Creek Indians, and Mrs. Helen Till

Sponsors: Mr. Owen Aronov, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Runkle, Sabel Steel, The S. Adam Schloss Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Weil, III, Laurie J. Weil, D.V.M. and Dr. Tommy Wool, and Ms. Helen Crump Wells

Co-sponsors: Mr. and Mrs. Sam Adams, Alabama Trucking Association, AmeriFirst Bank, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin H. Campbell II, CAPTRUST, Dr. Robert Combs, Crum Family Charitable Foundation, Mrs. Camille Elebash-Hill, Harmon Dennis Bradshaw, Inc., Mrs. Ann Hubbert, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Ives, Mr. and Mrs. L. Daniel Morris, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Mussafer, Dr. Alfred J. Newman, Jr., River Bank & Trust, Russell Construction of Alabama, Inc., Ms. Micki Beth Stiller, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Taylor, and Warren Averett, LLC.

Special thanks to the Alabama State Council on the Arts.

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