Skip to content
Search
Subscribe to our newsletter
Cuisine Noir logo
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
Food & Drink

Cultural Links: A Curator’s Connection to the NMAAHC

By Phyllis Armstrong
/
February 10, 2017
       
Dr. Joanne Hyppolite, curator at the NMAAHC
Pictured/Photo credit: Dr. Joanne Hyppolite
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

It is a place already on the “must see” list of people from near and far. In less than a year from its September 2016 grand opening, the National Museum of African American History & Culture (NMAAHC) is known for the emotional impact it currently has as the most visited museum in the world welcoming more than 600,000 visitors.

“People cry all over the museum,” says Joanne Hyppolite, museum curator. “A little bit of it is the emotional aspect of reliving history or visiting the history for the first time. Others are crying out of pure appreciation and pleasure.”

The depth of the gratitude visitors demonstrate for the new museum’s collection of almost 37,000 artifacts, documents, artworks and photographs is a humbling experience for Hyppolite, the curator responsible for the permanent Cultural Expressions exhibition on the 4th floor.

Living the Dream of Culture and History

She holds a master’s degree in African American Studies and a Ph.D. in African American and Caribbean Literary and Folklore. Hyppolite got a taste for the idea of becoming a curator while in graduate school at the University of Miami.

Being of Haitian descent, she did a project for History Miami that involved researching percussion traditions in Miami’s Haitian community. That sparked her interest in public history and the chance to do work that “would be available for people of all ages to see, consume, experience and enjoy.”

A passion for sharing history and culture eventually brought Hyppolite to NMAAHC where she is living her dream of connecting the bonds shared by Black communities in the U.S., Caribbean, Africa, Central America and South America.

“I can think of no better place where I can do that than at a museum like ours that is dedicated to the topic of Black history and culture and serves a diverse constituency of people from many backgrounds and many ages,” adds Hyppolite.

Artifact at the National Museum of African American Culture and History
Pictured: Artifact at the National Museum of African American Culture and History | Photo credit: NMAAHC

The curators at NMAAHC spent years researching, acquiring and organizing items for the museum. One story that fascinates Hyppolite is how a boat seat from Ecuador became the first acquisition in the collection.

It belonged to the grandmother of Juan Garcia Salazar. A spider web etched on the surface is representative of the Anansi folktales shared by people of African descent all over the world.

Preserving the boat seat was important to Salazar, and he shared stories about it while visiting the museum’s founding director, Lonnie G. Bunch, III.  “He literally told him folktales. He had the boat seat with him and offered it to us for a donation to the museum,” says Hyppolite.

Cultural Expressions That History Unfold

Inside the Cultural Expressions Exhibition, The Foodways: Culture and Cuisine, displays reflect the unique and diverse contributions African Americans and their ancestors have made to the culinary history of this country.

They grew, harvested, caught and prepared food all across the U.S. Whether on the farm, in the kitchen or on waterways, blacks played a pivotal role in what people put on their plates. “We tried to display as much variety as possible so that people understand that African-Americans contributed to the development of many cuisines in different parts of the United States,” explains Hyppolite.

Artifact at the National Museum of African American History and Culture
Pictured: Stockpot artifact at the National Museum of African American History and Culture | Photo credit: NMAAHC

The red chef coat worn by Leah Chase, the queen of Creole cuisine, is on display as is a stockpot (pictured) from Washington, D.C.’s Florida Avenue Grill, the oldest soul food restaurant in the world. Hyppolite says it represents a lot more than a soul food restaurant that opened in 1944.

“We wanted to tell that story because it is a story of mobility; the fact that southern African- Americans brought the tradition of cooking greens into the north and the rest of the United States when they moved out of the south in mass numbers as part of the Great Migration.”

Hyppolite continues to search for unique and historically significant items to add to the museum’s Cultural Expressions Exhibition. The hunt for a first edition printing of The Taste of Country Cooking by Chef Edna Lewis is ongoing and so is the effort to acquire things related to the professional career of Patrick Clark, a chef widely admired for his mastery of French cooking and contributions to New American cuisine. “Just one chef’s jacket would be great,” says the curator.

As for the future, the NMAAHC will unveil a photography exhibition in the spring of 2017. There are also plans for online and traveling exhibitions to expand the ways people can access the museum’s resources and the stories told inside its walls.

Visit the NMAAHC website for information about free passes to the museum or donating items to the collection.

Trending Stories

  • Homemade southern fried chicken with biscuits and mashed potatoes
    Culture10 Classic Dishes to Celebrate National Soul Food Month
  • Homesteading - Farmer or homesteader hands carrying food
    Climate + FoodCultivating Freedom Through Homesteading: Tips to Get Started and Reconnected
  • Celebrity chef and The Great Soul Food Cook-Off Champion Razia Sabour
    Black Chefs, Food & DrinkCelebrity Chef Razia Sabour Honors Soul Food’s History with Competition Win
  • Collard greens with pork
    CultureHow Soulful Collard Greens Are Rooted in Black Culture, Cooking and Farming

Subscribe

Subscribe to The Weekly Dish and get the week’s top food stories delivered to our inbox each Thursday.


    Diaspora Food Stories Podcast

    Listen to global chefs, winemakers, farmers and more tell their stories in their own words.
    Listen to the Podcast

    Support Award-Winning Journalism

    Help Cuisine Noir deliver stories that honor Black food history, culture and traditions.

    Donate
    Donate on Paypal

    Related Articles

    Loading...
    Haitan Restauratuer Kathia Joseph, co-owner of Casa Matilda Steakhouse
    Featured Food & Drink

    Haitian Restaurateur Kathia Joseph Sizzles with Success at Miami Steakhouse 

    Couple dining in the courtyard in New Orleans
    Food & Drink Travel

    25 Black-Owned Restaurants in New Orleans For Every Palate

    Alchy Cocktails founder Gregory Etienne
    Food & Drink

    Alchy Cocktails Founder Gregory Etienne Raises the Bar for Craft Cocktails

    Cuisine Noir is an award-winning lifestyle media outlet dedicated to providing culturally-rich and factually reported stories that connect the African diaspora through food, drink and travel and celebrate Black food cultures.

    Facebook Instagram Pinterest Youtube

    About

    Our History
    Our Team
    Content Integrity
    Advertise with Us
    Photography Use
    Affiliate Links
    Donate to Our Work
    Privacy

    Subscribe

    Subscribe to The Weekly Dish to have award-winning food journalism delivered to your inbox each Thursday.


      Copyright© 2025 Cuisine Noir and The Global Food and Drink Initiative.
      Site by ACS Digital