The Soul Box Project exhibit on the National Mall will be the largest memorial to date, providing a dramatic visual for the incomprehensible number of people killed or injured by gunfire in the U.S. in fewer than three years.
Within this exhibit, almost 36,000 Soul Boxes will represent the number of U.S. gunfire deaths in just one year. This selection of Boxes will be exhibited on display panels under an open pavilion spanning the width of the Mall. Visitors will be able to get up close to view these memorials personalized with names, messages and compelling artwork.
Hundreds of volunteers will carry 164,000 additional Soul Boxes, representing the unnamed victims of gunfire, onto the Mall in a solemn procession.
The title of this exhibit, This Loss We Carry, is an apt description of how we can honor the many lives torn apart by the gunfire epidemic, echoing similar words from Amanda Gorman’s 2021 inaugural poem, “The Hill We Climb.”
We will be participating in a volunteer capacity for the event on Saturday, October 16th. On behalf of all of our community partners, we would love for you to join us in-person at the Mall!
Here’s where individuals can sign up to help with volunteer tasks over the weekend:The final drop-off day for any completed Soul Boxes you have folded is Monday, September 20th at Smith Center for Healing and the Arts.
Click here to read Let Your Voice Be Heard with the Soul Box Project press release, with words from our Executive Director, Lisa Simms Booth. We are honored to be participating in this project in collaboration with a few of our community partners, including:
- Joan Hisaoka Healing Arts Gallery
- Smith Center’s Artist-in-Residence Program
- Thelma D. Jones Breast Cancer Fund
- Southwest Neighborhood Assembly Youth Activities Task Force
Supplies Needed:
Upcoming Soul Box-Making sessions:
Smith Center will be organizing drop-off days and times to collect your completed Soul Boxes, as a part of our goal to create 500 Soul Boxes to add to the display at the National Mall on October 16-17, 2021.
The Soul Box Project collects and exhibits thousands of hand-folded origami boxes to raise awareness of the U.S. gunfire epidemic. Each Soul Box holds space for one life lost or injured by gun violence, defense, accident or suicide.
Art has the rare ability to mend social, psychological, and physical ills by building community, inspiring change, and celebrating life. Founded in 2008, the Joan Hisaoka Healing Arts Gallery at Smith Center for Healing and the Arts, is a nonprofit arts space in Washington, DC. The gallery is dedicated to exhibiting fine art that explores the innate connection between healing and creativity. Through a rotating exhibition schedule, the gallery features contemporary artists that address a diversity of significant themes, including spirituality, social change, multiculturalism, health, environmentalism, and community.