The exhibition will tour the following locations:
ELLOREE HERITAGE MUSEUM AND CULTURAL CENTER (Orangeburg County)
Friday, June 27, 2008 – August 10, 2008
CONTACT: Adadra Williams
elloreemuseum@ntinet.com
BELTON AREA MUSEUM ASSOCIATION (Anderson County)
Friday, August 15-October 5, 2008
CONTACT: Shirah Heller
bama7400@aol.com
NATIONAL BEAN MARKET MUSEUM (Florence County)
Friday, October 24 – December 21, 2008
CONTACT: Briley Altman
lccm2002@ftc-i.net
EDGEFIELD COUNTY PEACH MUSEUM (Edgefield County)
Friday, January 9, 2009 – March 1, 2009
CONTACT: Donna Livingston
info@edgefieldcountychamber.org
EDISTO ISLAND MUSEUM (Charleston County)
Friday, March 6, 2009 – May 9, 2009
CONTACT: Gretchen Smith
gsmith@edistomuseum.org
Through a selection of artifacts, photographs and illustrations, Key Ingredients examines how culture, ethnicity, landscape and tradition influence the foods and flavors we enjoy across the nation. The exhibition looks at the evolution of the American kitchen and how food industries have responded to the technological innovations that have enabled Americans to choose an ever-wider variety of frozen, prepared and fresh foods.
An interactive website, www.keyingredients.org, has been developed in conjunction with the exhibition. The site invites people across the country to share their family recipes and food stories, learn about other food traditions and identify favorite small town eateries.
Key Ingredients is part of Museum on Main Street, a unique collaboration between the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES), state humanities councils across the nation, and local host institutions. To learn more about Key Ingredients and other Museum on Main Street exhibitions, visit www.museumonmainstreet.org.
The United States Congress has provided support for Museum on Main Street. SITES connects millions of Americans with their shared cultural heritage through a wide range of art, science and history exhibitions. State humanities councils, located in each state and U.S. territory, support community-based humanities programs that highlight such topics as local history, literature and cultural traditions. The Humanities CouncilSC seeks to increase public understanding of and support for the humanities; telling the human story by awarding grants for high-quality public programs, by generating special humanities initiatives, and by bringing humanities perspectives to bear on contemporary issues. To learn more, visit www.sites.si.edu and www.schumanities.org.
Humanities Council SC
803.771.2477
tjwallace@schumanities.org