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Searching for Augusta Savage

Premiere: 2/15/2024 | 00:21:48 |

Augusta Savage was the first person in the U.S. to open a gallery dedicated to African American art. A Harlem Renaissance sculptor and art educator, she was also one of the first Black women art activists of her time and fought for the inclusion of Black artists in the mainstream canon. Art historian Jeffreen M. Hayes, Ph.D. explores Savage's legacy, and why her artwork has been largely erased.

About the Episode

Sandy Rattley’s director statement

Augusta Savage in her studio working on her 1939 New York World’s Fair monument “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”

Augusta Savage (1892-1962) is an amazing woman who overcame great odds to accomplish many firsts in her 70 years of life. On the global stage and while at the height of her career, she became the only Black artist, and one of four women, commissioned to create an exhibit for the 1939 World’s Fair in Flushing, NY. She decided to create a tribute to her friend from Jacksonville, Florida, former NAACP head and poet, James Weldon Johnson, who had composed the lyrics for the Black National Anthem, “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”

Augusta Savage took over a year to create a 16-foot sculpture depicting a choir of 12 Black children singing, arranged like strings on a harp held up by the hand of God. Her monument to Black culture and the promise of Black youth, also known as “The Harp,” was among the fair’s most visited and photographed exhibits seen by more than five million people. Yet tragically, “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” was bulldozed when the Fair closed, as Savage was not able to raise the funds to transport and store it, or have it cast in durable materials.

More than half of the 160 works of art Savage created are missing or have been destroyed, and none of her monumental large-scale works have survived.

Our film is titled Searching for Augusta Savage because we wanted to investigate why evidence of Savage’s accomplishments and her work appear to be erased. We wanted to know how someone so accomplished, so enterprising and so celebrated during her lifetime, could be missing from the annals of American history and the museum landscape.

We found that Augusta Savage was fearless and outspoken.

Portrait of Augusta Savage in 1938.

She protested against an incident she experienced in 1923, when she was accepted, and then rejected from participation in a prestigious art fellowship in Paris because of her race, initiating a letter writing campaign and speaking out in editorials and interviews in mainstream media. She also resisted sexism, even from some of her counterparts in the Harlem Renaissance, such as scholar Alain Locke, who questioned Savage’s academic credentials and why she was the subject of so much media attention.

Also, because of her association with Black identity movements such as the United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) and other progressive causes, Savage was being investigated by the FBI. But these challenges did not deter her art activism or her art practice, including writing poems and children’s stories. Throughout her life, Savage continued to teach art to children everywhere that she lived – in Florida, Harlem, and Saugerties, NY, where she spent the last two decades of her life.

The fact that so little of Augusta Savage’s work is in the permanent collections of museums and available to the public is an issue that has relevance today, as Black women continue to be the artists with the lowest representation and visibility in the art marketplace. As reported in the 2022 Burns Halperin Report, between 2008 and 2020, just 11% of acquisitions, and 14.9% of exhibitions at U.S. museums were of work by female-identifying artists, and only 2.2% of acquisitions, and 6.3% of exhibitions were by Black American artists. Just 0.5%, that’s less than 1% of acquisitions, were the work of Black American women.

To counter the fact that much of her art is not available today, we collaborated with new technology artists to bring it back to life.

Recreation of Augusta Savage creating “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”

Artists worked to create and animate interpretations of Savage’s most impressive lost work of art, “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” the 16-foot sculpture she created for the 1939 World’s Fair which is reconstructed in the film. Informed by Savage’s own words and writings, we also recreated major moments in Savage’s early childhood for which no archival or visual documentation exists. We feel that digital reconstruction can be a powerful tool for remembrance, helping us reverse Savage’s historical erasure.

Augusta Savage had tremendous resolve and commitment. Her sense of mission and self-determination are legendary, especially for a young Black woman from the South in the 1920s. She has been called a “waymaker” for confronting racism and overcoming countless obstacles, and for being so dedicated to creating careers in the arts for so many Black artists and aspiring artists. Her experiences countering under-representation in the art world still resonate today. It has been a privilege to tell her story and provide testimony to the life, work and example of Augusta Savage!

More about Augusta Savage

Born in 1892 in Green Cove Springs Florida, she had a strong desire to be an artist and work with clay at a very young age, a pastime that both her parents vehemently opposed. Her father was a Methodist minister who saw the animals she made as sinful graven images. Savage said that her parents “practically whipped the art out of [her].” She persisted. Initially self-taught, she entered a bust of former West Palm Beach Mayor, George Graham Currie, her interpretation of a wild stallion she modeled using a donkey, and a few religious statues in the 1919 West Palm Beach County Fair, exhibiting her work between stalls of farm animals, fruits and vegetables. Savage won a blue ribbon and $25 prize, and her passion and promise were so contagious that the fair’s attendees spontaneously took up a collection to support her dream of becoming an artist and send her to New York.

Augusta Savage.Before moving to New York City, Augusta Savage spent time in Jacksonville, Florida trying to convince “wealthy Negroes” to have busts made. But that plan did not pan out. In 1921, Savage took a train from Jacksonville to the Big Apple wearing a homemade coat with $4.50 in her purse. After completing a 4-year art course at Cooper Union in three years, she became one of the leading influencers of the Harlem Renaissance, was acclaimed as one of the most talented artists of the time period, and called “Sculptress of the Negro People” because she centered Black life in her work.

Savage opened the first gallery in the United States dedicated to the work of Black artists; mentored a generation of venerated artists, including Romare Bearden, Gwendolyn Knight, and Jacob Lawrence; and founded several organizations that provided free art education and training to over 2,500 people in Harlem, NY. She was also the first African American elected to the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, later renamed the National Association of Women Artists.

 

About filmmakers Charlotte Mangin and Sandy Rattley

Charlotte Mangin.

Charlotte Mangin is a documentary filmmaker with over 20 years of experience in multimedia storytelling, fundraising and nonprofit management. She was the creator, executive producer, director, and writer of Unladylike2020, an animated documentary series about unsung women who changed America at the turn of the 20th century. She spent five years on the production staff of National Geographic Television & Film, reporting from the jungles of the Amazon to the Himalayan Mountains. Mangin produced a dozen documentaries for PBS’s international affairs series Wide Angle, covering issues such as legal reform in China, human rights in Zimbabwe, and race relations in Brazil. Her hour-long Wide Angle program, Class of 2006, about women’s rights in Morocco, won an International Documentary Association Award. Mangin was nominated for 4 Emmy Awards for Pioneers of Thirteen, a 6-hour series commemorating the flagship PBS station’s 50th anniversary.

Sandra Rattley.

Sandy Rattley has over 40 years experience leading and launching multimedia projects. Rattley was also executive producer, director and writer for Unladylike2020. She was senior story editor of the Spotify podcast series The Sum of Us, hosted by author Heather McGee. Rattley was also executive producer of seminal documentary projects including the Peabody Award winning series Wade in the Water about African American sacred music, produced by NPR and the Smithsonian Institution, and Making the Music, hosted by Wynton Marsalis, produced for NPR and PBS. Rattley is the former VP for Cultural Programming at NPR where she launched the weekly show, Wait, Wait Don’t Tell Me, as well as NPR’s office of civic engagement. She serves as creative consultant for Black Public Media’s 360 Incubator, a mentorship program for African American media makers. Rattley also founded, launched and produced the Africa Learning Channel, a Pan-African news and information service, streaming via WorldSpace satellite to over 100 million listeners in 51 African countries.

About narrator Jeffreen M. Hayes, Ph.D.

Jeffreen M. Hayes, Ph.d.

Jeffreen M. Hayes, Ph.D., a public art historian and curator, merges administrative, curatorial and academic practices in her support for artists and community development. As an advocate for racial inclusion, equity and access, Jeffreen invites community participation into the projects she initiates and manages, to ensure art’s relevance beyond the walls of museums and galleries. Her curatorial projects include SILOS (2016-18), Augusta Savage: Renaissance Woman (2018-2020), AFRICOBRA: Messages to the People (2018), Process (2019), AFRICOBRA: Nation Time (2019), and most recently, Dreaming of a Future (2023).

Hayes writes about art history, Black art and visual culture, and arts activism. Some of her books include Augusta Savage: Renaissance Woman, AfriCOBRA: Messages to the People, and Etched in Collective History. She is a TEDx speaker and has spoken at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture; Norton Museum of Art; ArtPace; Rollins Museum of Art; and Columbia College among other arts organizations and institutions. She has served as the Executive Director of Threewalls since 2015, providing strategic vision for the artistic direction and impact of the organization to connect segregated communities, people and experiences in Chicago.

 

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PRODUCTION CREDITS

Searching for Augusta Savage is written and directed by Charlotte Mangin and Sandy Rattley. Produced by Mariana Surillo. Edited by Virginie Danglades. Narrated by Jeffreen M. Hayes, Ph.D. The voice of Augusta Savage is performed by Lorraine Toussaint.

For American Masters, Michael Kantor is Executive Producer, and Julie Sacks is Series Producer. Joe Skinner is Series Producer for American Masters Shorts.

This film was produced by Audacious Women, LLC in association with American Masters Pictures and Black Public Media.

About American Masters
Now in its 38th season on PBS, American Masters illuminates the lives and creative journeys of those who have left an indelible impression on our cultural landscape—through compelling, unvarnished stories. Setting the standard for documentary film profiles, the series has earned widespread critical acclaim: 28 Emmy Awards—including 10 for Outstanding Non-Fiction Series and five for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special—two News & Documentary Emmys, 14 Peabodys, three Grammys, two Producers Guild Awards, an Oscar, and many other honors. To further explore the lives and works of more than 250 masters past and present, the American Masters website offers full episodes, film outtakes, filmmaker interviews, the podcast American Masters: Creative Spark, educational resources, digital original series and more. The series is a production of The WNET Group.

American Masters is available for streaming concurrent with broadcast on all station-branded PBS platforms, including PBS.org and the PBS App, available on iOS, Android, Roku streaming devices, Apple TV, Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, Samsung Smart TV, Chromecast and VIZIO. PBS station members can view many series, documentaries and specials via PBS Passport. For more information about PBS Passport, visit the PBS Passport FAQ website.

About The WNET Group
The WNET Group creates inspiring media content and meaningful experiences for diverse audiences nationwide. It is the community-supported home of New York’s THIRTEEN – America’s flagship PBS station – WLIW21, THIRTEEN PBSKids, WLIW World and Create; NJ PBS, New Jersey’s statewide public television network; Long Island’s only NPR station WLIW-FM; ALL ARTS, the arts and culture media provider; newsroom NJ Spotlight News; and FAST channel PBS Nature. Through these channels and streaming platforms, The WNET Group brings arts, culture, education, news, documentary, entertainment and DIY programming to more than five million viewers each month. The WNET Group’s award-winning productions include signature PBS series Nature, Great Performances, American Masters and Amanpour and Company and trusted local news programs MetroFocus and NJ Spotlight News with Briana Vannozzi. Inspiring curiosity and nurturing dreams, The WNET Group’s award-winning Kids’ Media and Education team produces the PBS KIDS series Cyberchase, interactive Mission US history games, and resources for families, teachers and caregivers. A leading nonprofit public media producer for more than 60 years, The WNET Group presents and distributes content that fosters lifelong learning, including multiplatform initiatives addressing poverty, jobs, economic opportunity, social justice, understanding and the environment. Through Passport, station members can stream new and archival programming anytime, anywhere. The WNET Group represents the best in public media. Join us.

UNDERWRITING

Original production funding for Searching for Augusta Savage is provided by the National Endowment for the Arts, Heather L. Burns and Kathleen A. Maloy, Humanities New York, and Devin and Gina Mathews.

Original production funding for American Masters Shorts is provided by the Rosalind P. Walter Foundation, the Anderson Family Charitable Fund, the Marc Haas Foundation, The Charina Endowment Fund in memory of Robert B. Menschel, the Ambrose Monell Foundation, the Kate W. Cassidy Foundation, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III, and the Philip & Janice Levin Foundation.

Original series production funding for American Masters is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, AARP, Rosalind P. Walter Foundation, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III, Cheryl and Philip Milstein Family, Judith and Burton Resnick, Seton J Melvin, Koo and Patricia Yuen,  The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation, Lillian Goldman Programming Endowment, Thea Petschek Iervolino Foundation, The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation, Vital Projects Fund, The Marc Haas Foundation, Ellen and James S. Marcus, The Ambrose Monell Foundation, The André and Elizabeth Kertész Foundation, and public television viewers.

TRANSCRIPT

(upbeat music) - [Jeffreen] Augusta Savage was the only African American commissioned to create an exhibit for the 1939 World's Fair in Flushing, New York.

- [Augusta] I have taken for my theme the national Negro anthem.

It is the poem written by the late James Weldon Johnson and set to the music by his brother, Rosamond Johnson.

The title is "Lift Every Voice and Sing."

♪ Lift every voice and sing ♪ - [Jeffreen] Savage worked for over a year creating a 16-foot sculpture that paid homage to African American culture and the promise of Black youth.

♪ Harmonies ♪ ♪ Of liberty ♪ - What were the reactions to the sculpture?

- It was the most popular piece of art in the 1939 World's Fair.

She was able to make souvenirs to sell.

(upbeat music) - After this highly publicized display at the World's Fair, it is literally just dismantled and discarded.

(stones clinking) That's emblematic of the erasure of the history of African-American artists, African-American culture.

We were there.

She was there.

But all that we're left with today is a small scale cast of the original work of art.

(upbeat music) (lively jazz music) - [Jeffreen] Not only was "Lift Every Voice and Sing" destroyed, but some say 70 of the approximately 160 works of art by Augusta Savage are lost or missing today.

I'm Jeffreen Hayes.

I am the curator of the Augusta Savage Renaissance Woman Exhibition, and I'm on a search to understand why one of America's greatest sculptors seems to have been erased.

(lively jazz music) (no audio) (bright upbeat music) (bright upbeat music continues) I'm in Harlem, y'all.

(bright upbeat music) The first stop on my search for answers is the Schomburg Center, the research mecca of Black culture.

(bright upbeat music) (door lock beeps) (bright upbeat music) - I manage a collection of over 15,000 items that document the Black Diaspora.

And of course, we have the largest collection of Augusta Savage work in a public institution.

(bright upbeat music) We have about 22 pieces.

(bright upbeat music) Here we have the "Reclining Nude."

This one is bronze.

And this is "The Pugilist."

She was able to really capture the strength.

You could see his musculature and his facial features.

And then we have "Laughing Boy."

She did a lot of kids.

- And what's the material?

- It's plaster.

(pulsing music) This, of course, is her bust of James Weldon Johnson, a real renaissance man, a lawyer, songwriter, poet, secretary general of NAACP, and a good friend of hers.

And this is the original "Gamin" that one set her off.

That one set her off.

(soft music) - We only have two boxes of her papers.

She didn't leave much behind for us.

(upbeat music) - [Augusta] I was born on the 29th of February at the dark of the moon.

I was a leap year baby and it seems to me that I had been leaping ever since.

(upbeat music) - [Jeffreen] Born in 1892 in Green Cove Springs, Florida, the seventh of 14 children, Savage resisted her parents' early disapproval of her art making.

- [Augusta] Ever since I was a tiny little tot I wanted to model things out of any material I could get my hands on.

Dough, soap, mud, or clay.

I made ducks by the dozen from the red clay and would stick them all around the yard.

(upbeat music) - Augusta got recognition at the county fair in Florida and the commissioner of the fair said, "Augusta, you should go to New York so that you could explore your talent, so you could be an artist."

So she took him up on it and she got accepted to Cooper Union.

- [Augusta] I had just arrived in New York with exactly $4 and 50 cents, a determination to become an artist and a successful one in six months.

- She was a single mom.

She left her daughter Irene with the family so she could pursue her education here and finished her degree in three years instead of four.

(cars sputtering) She did work as a laundress and things were very hard for her.

She wasn't making a lot of money.

(energetic music) - [Jeffreen] After getting established, Savage who was widowed twice and once divorced, brought her daughter and seven other family members up from Florida to live in her small apartment in Harlem.

Her home also became a gathering place for leading artists and intellectuals of the 1920s and '30s New Negro Movement, later known as the Harlem Renaissance.

(energetic music) - Zora Neale Hurston was there, Richard Wright was there.

Countee Cullen was one of her best friends.

(bright jazz music) - The Harlem Renaissance was central to the portrayal of every aspect of modern Black life that was taking shape in the new Black cities that were as a result of The Great Migration.

(upbeat jazz music) We had the founding of the NAACP, of the Urban League, as well as literature, music.

This was the period when jazz really began to flourish.

(upbeat jazz music) - [Jeffreen] In 1923, Savage got a scholarship to attend a prestigious art school in France.

(playful upbeat music) - [Augusta] Then suddenly, when I was all prepared and about ready to sail, I got a letter from the committee saying they were awfully sorry I did not let them know I was colored, as they had not made arrangements for colored students.

(playful upbeat music) Can you imagine the headache and heartache resulting?

However, it only served to fire me with more determination than ever to succeed.

(playful upbeat music) - She started a letter writing campaign to let everyone know what had happened to her.

(playful upbeat music) - [Augusta] I hear so many complaints to the effect that Negroes do not take advantage of the educational opportunities offered them.

(playful upbeat music) Well, one of the reasons is that as soon as one of us gets his head above the crowd, there are millions of feet ready to crush it back again.

(playful upbeat music) How am I to compete with other American artists if I'm not to be given the same opportunity?

(playful upbeat music) - You know, she still never gave up the dream of studying in Paris and then she finally got it mid 1929 when she did "Gamin," and that took her to Europe to study.

(playful upbeat music) So as a Black woman, she just powered through that.

She never let it stop her.

It just made her stronger.

She was a way maker.

She was an artist, an artist advocate, an artist educator, and a activist.

(playful upbeat music) (footsteps thumping) - I'm at the location of the Savage Studio of Arts and Crafts, a space that she founded in 1932 in this building.

(upbeat jazz music) Here Savage hosted free art classes that included painting, and sculpture, and printmaking.

- [Augusta] We really have a lot of native talent in Harlem.

I hope that I can make the school a permanent one 'cause there is a crying need for it.

We've had to turn down 60 persons in the last six weeks for lack of space.

(upbeat jazz music relaxes) (bright piano music) - Augusta put a little bit of steel in my backbone and I don't think that I would've continued against all the odds it is to be a woman artist to keep right on working.

It was because she was my mentor, because she was my friend, and because she had done the same thing.

(gentle bright music) - [Tammi] She started the Harlem Artists' Guild to hire Black artists onto projects.

(slow uptempo music) - Augusta Savage was one of the leading lights in the Harlem community.

This was one of the most important periods in my life.

When I came in contact with her.

She thought it was time for me to start being paid for what I was doing.

I don't know how to make a living delivering newspapers or working in the laundry but when I turned 21 in 1938, Augusta literally took me downtown and had me signed up on the Federal Art Project where was paid a tremendous salary at that time of $23 and 86 cents a week.

(bright jazz music) - Savage also secured government funding during the Great Depression to expand her school to provide training to 2,500 youth and adults.

(bright jazz music) I'm at the location where the Harlem Community Art Center was established in 1937 by Augusta Savage.

There were a number of African American art masters who not only taught, but were also students at the center.

(soft gentle music) The way that she was navigating her career, I began to really think about her as a race woman, putting the Black body and the Black experience at the center, creating a deeper understanding of race in daily life.

(upbeat jazz music) - [Tammi] Augusta Savage was very much in tuned with everyday people, and she made works of everyday people.

(upbeat jazz music) - [Jeffreen] Which work speaks to you the most?

- Well, I have to say "Gamin."

That was my first encounter with her work.

A sweet little boy with his cap on.

He was contemporary and definitely Black.

(upbeat jazz music) For me, I could tell when an artist loves me by what they create.

When they're speaking to me and they recognize Blackness in a beautiful way.

And you know, for 1929, for her to leave that for us.

So, I love that work.

(gentle piano music) - It's a very academically classical rendering of a young boy's face and compare that to the way young Black boys were depicted in the popular culture, that portrait was absolutely modern.

It was radically modern.

(lively jazz music) - Although it's no longer here, this is where Augusta Savage opened the first Black art gallery in the country, the Salon of Contemporary Negro Arts.

(lively jazz music) - [Augusta] I've long felt that Negro artists have reached the point where they should have a gallery of their own.

We've made every effort to make this one of the finest galleries in the country, a mecca for all art lovers.

(melancholic music) - [Jeffreen] The opening was a grand affair attended by over 500 art lovers.

But in the midst of the Great Depression, the artwork didn't sell.

The gallery closed within three months and funding for the Harlem Community Art Center ran out too.

- She said, "The community is not ready for me."

And when she told me this story, she literally cried.

She was so broken.

(melancholic music) (no audio) (light jazz music) - In looking for work by Augusta Savage, I was struck by how few places had the work.

We don't have her in our collection.

Even the historically Black colleges and universities don't all have works by Augusta Savage.

(light jazz music) The museum market, the art market, the galleries, the critical attention was given to male artists.

(light jazz music) Even today, 87% of works of art in museum collections are by men.

(light jazz music) Augusta Savage was at the forefront of the forgotten woman artist.

But she didn't have the means to ship "Lift Every Voice and Sing" back from Flushing into a store room in Harlem or a museum and have it preserved.

And it's probably the most tragic example of Black women artists not having resources to preserve their work.

(light jazz music) (gentle acoustic music) - After the losses and disappointments she experienced, Savage took refuge in upstate New York, a hundred miles north of Harlem, where some say she just disappeared.

(gentle acoustic music) This is really a pilgrimage.

(gentle acoustic music) Here we go.

(gentle acoustic music) (gentle acoustic music continues) The Augusta Savage House and Studio has been listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior.

(loud knocking) Hi.

- Hello, Dr. Hayes.

- Nice meet you.

- It's so good to see you.

- [Jeffreen] Anthony.

This is so exciting.

- [Anthony] Yeah, welcome to Augusta Savage's home.

(relaxing music) - [Jeffreen] So tell us about or how Augusta ended up in Saugerties.

- She had friends in the Hudson Valley, and that may have been one of the reasons that she came to Saugerties specifically.

It was also a lovely town near a river.

- What's your connection to Augusta?

- I'm related to the owners of this house, but the earlier connection is to my grandfather who was a scientist and he met Augusta Savage in the late '40s.

She would occasionally come over to my grandparents' home on the river and give these poetry readings.

So this was her typewriter, this Remington.

See that's where she did her writing- - Her writing.

- [Anthony] Her stories, her poetry.

- [Augusta] I've spent hours in deep communion with the humming birds and bees.

I've exchanged loves deepest secrets, with the softly sighing trees.

I've discussed my pains and pleasures, I've revealed my dearest treasures.

And upon life's harsh alarms, I've turned my back.

(lighthearted music) - [Jeffreen] Very few people know about her as a poet or a writer.

It's wonderful to hear that perspective about Augusta.

- My grandfather, he would say, "She's the smartest person you'll ever meet."

He would talk about composers and he would talk about scientists, and he'd talk about Augusta Savage.

It was usually something like Beethoven, Erwin Schrodinger who came up with quantum physics, and Augusta Savage.

And so, she was in that orbit of great human beings, great minds.

I wanna show you a few other things.

- Yes, please.

- Yeah.

- It's the plastilina and it was a type of clay.

This is the original one that she would've used to do her sculpting.

(gentle piano music) So for instance, like this is the Marian Anderson sculpture.

She made that while she was here in Saugerties.

(gentle piano music) There's a general sense that she was forgotten but from what we understand, she had people coming here all the time.

- She still had a social life.

- [Anthony] She still had a social life.

- Still connected to New York.

(gentle piano music) So tell me, what are the plans for this space?

- In the next few years you maybe have some sort of residency program for aspiring artists and writers.

- So what would be helping to fulfill a dream that she put out into the world to found a colony of young artists in the countryside.

- I wanted to ask you if what your impressions were of coming here and seeing what you saw today.

- [Jeffreen] Will probably take me a while to fully digest that I'm sitting in this moment in the same kitchen as someone that I have lovingly called my art godmother.

I think that there have definitely been attempts to erase her and downplay her importance.

- [Anthony] Yeah.

- I'm just really happy that she was most likely at peace here in a way that she may not have found in the city.

(no audio) - [Augusta] I have created nothing really beautiful, really lasting, but if I can inspire one of these youngsters to develop the talent I know they possess, then my monument will be in their work.

(no audio) (lively jazz music) (lively jazz music continues) (lively jazz music continues) (lively jazz music continues) (lively jazz music continues) (logo snaps) (gentle music) (lighthearted music) (lighthearted music continues) (lighthearted music fades)

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