Open Wednesday - Saturday 10 AM – 5 PM*
Portals
The Black History Museum & Cultural Center of Virginia (BHMVA) worked in collaboration with the City of Richmond Department of Parks, Recreation, and Community Facilities, with support from Shockoe-area partners, Venture Richmond and The Art Seen to create Portals.
This community-based exhibition currently on display in Shockoe Bottom, Richmond, VA, features large-scale, historic photographs that depict African Americans from the early 1800s to the 1980s.
The images provide a glimpse into the daily lives of Black Virginians in the context of African Americans and Labor, the 2025 Black History Month theme of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH). BHMVA has partnered to create this exhibition in alignment with the ASALH theme to pay homage to our ancestors who were brought to America for their skills, expertise, and intellectual capital, all of which were instrumental in building this nation. Whether you see the images by visiting Shockoe Bottom or explore them here on our website, we invite the community to download the QR codes to learn more about each image.
The interactive project runs through the end of February.
Women on Porch Circa 1930
PHC0035/V.89.296.16
LOCATION: 1721 E. Main St.The Ammons Family Photo
Collection, The Valentine
Laying Trolley Tracks, probably 1st Street
The Valentine
X.51.01.178
Emancipation Day Celebration
LOCATION: VA. Interfaith Center
V.2000.24
The Valentine
T.W. Wood & Sons Seedsman Warehouse
11 S.14th Street
V.77.18.01
The Valentine
Second African Baptist Church Group Crica 1930
LOCATION: VA. Interfaith Center
PHC0035/V.89.296.60
The Ammons Family Photo Collection, The Valentine
The First Armstrong Cadets 4/28/1945
PHC0035/V.89.296.39
The Ammons Family Photo Collection, The Valentine
Marching Band Circa 1926
PHC0035/V.89.296.26
The Ammons Family Photo Collection, The Valentine