U-M Chamber Choir Returns to UMMA For Another Powerful Performance

In conjunction with UMMA’s exhibition Oh honey…A queer reading of the collection and the 50th anniversary of the U‑M Spectrum Center, the U-M Chamber Choir recently performed the oratorio Considering Matthew Shepard in UMMA’s Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Apse.
You can watch the filmed performance during a live broadcast, presented by the Penny Stamps Speaker Series, at 8pm ET on December 9th. The performance will also air on DPTV on December 11th–check your local listings for more information.
Considering Matthew Shepard was performed under the direction of award winning conductor Eugene Rogers, acclaimed stage director Matt Kunkel, and Emmy-award winning film producer Bob Berg. The Stamps Event Series’ premiere of the video will be followed by a conversation between Rogers and the piece’s composer, Craig Hella Johnson.
Johnson wrote the piece as a tribute to Matthew Shepard, a gay college student who in 1998 was beaten by strangers, tied to a fence, and left for dead. Shepard’s death, along with the murder of James Byrd Jr. by white supermacists a few months earlier, led to Congress passing the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act in 2009.
The U-M Chamber Choir has had a long partnership with UMMA, and has performed multiple shows in the Apse, including Everything is Made of Light in 2019 and the little match girl passion in 2020.

Lynn Davis
Ken Moody, New York City (Dancer #31)
selenium-toned gelatin silver print on paper
20 in. x 24 in. ( 50.8 cm x 60.96 cm )
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. James Agah, Class of 1989 (BBA)