Voices Carry

A new Valentine exhibition offers perspective on HIV/AIDs in Richmond

By Harry Kollatz Jr.

Originally posted on Richmond Magazine

The continued persistence and pervasiveness of HIV/AIDS is the subject of Voices From Richmond’s Hidden Epidemic, an exhibition running from Jan. 23 to May 25 at The Valentine. In it, 30 individuals — those with the illness and those who treat or have cared for them — are given expression, accompanied by large-format black-and-white portraits by Michael Simon. The narratives were collected by University of Richmond professors Laura Browder and Patricia Herrera. The project follows The Valentine’s Pandemic exhibition, which covered the history of mass illness in the city, from 19th-century plagues such as yellow fever and cholera to the Great Influenza of 1918-19 and HIV/AIDS in the 1980s-90s. In the Richmond region today, some 5,000 people are living with the disease.

Valentine archival curator Meg Hughes explains the origin of “Voices”: “This came about because of the oral histories collected by Browder and Elizabeth Outka for ‘Pandemic,’ ” she says. “Rather than do the HIV/AIDS component ourselves, we approached Laura and Patricia, and they eagerly accepted. In this way, it blossomed into its own project.” 

 
Activist Lisa D. Cumbey (left), sister of artist J. Alan Cumbey, who died of AIDS, and Diversity Richmond Deputy Director Rodney Lofton are part of the Voices From Richmond’s Hidden Epidemic exhibition at The Valentine, on view from Jan. 23 to May 2…

Activist Lisa D. Cumbey (left), sister of artist J. Alan Cumbey, who died of AIDS, and Diversity Richmond Deputy Director Rodney Lofton are part of the Voices From Richmond’s Hidden Epidemic exhibition at The Valentine, on view from Jan. 23 to May 25. Photos by Michael Simon

 

Browder further elaborates, “We wanted to bring together these 30 voices to provide a kaleidoscopic view of the disease’s history here and bring attention to a wider public. Some were affected in the 1980s. We have medical providers and activists who provide a wider picture of how HIV/AIDS has affected Richmond.” One of those whose voice is heard is LGBTQ activist Guy Kinman, whose interview took place in hospice. He died Sept. 17, 2018, at age 100 — “and eight months,” Browder adds. 

Rather than use audio recordings, text plaques by the portraits share the subjects’ personal accounts. This choice may give viewers the mental space to absorb what they’re learning and to hear those voices their own way. 

“Richmond has a huge HIV problem that very few people in the city are aware of if they’re not directly affected by it,” Herrera says. The region is 19th among the nation’s cities for new infections. 

Sobering and surprising statistics abound: On a national level, people have a 1 in 99 chance of contracting HIV. But if you are a black man who has black male sexual partners, that is increased to a 50% chance. “Here in Richmond, a black woman is 14 times more likely [than a woman of another race] to contract HIV,” Browder says. “More than a quarter of people in Richmond with HIV are women.” One woman in St. Paul’s Baptist Church’s HIV support group learned just last year that she carries the illness, and she’s 70, Herrera says. Seniors are among the growing number of those with the virus. People in the older demographic grew up not thinking about condoms. “There are grandmothers who are HIV positive,” Herrera says.

 
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