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Ahmauri Williams-Alford

Assistant Curator Of Historical Interpretation at Telfair Museums

Ahmauri Williams-Alford currently holds the position of Assistant Curator of Historical Interpretation and Tenenbaum Education Fellow at Telfair Museums, where responsibilities include assisting with gallery interpretation, program development, and evaluation for exhibitions. Prior experience includes serving as Graduate Collection Manager in the Laboratory of Archaeology at Georgia Southern University, focusing on archaeological collection management, curation, compliance with NAGPRA, and public outreach. As a Graduate Research Assistant, Ahmauri managed the Coastal Improvement Grant project on commercial fishing oral histories, coordinating research activities, conducting interviews, and contributing to a traveling research exhibition. Ahmauri earned a Master's Degree in Social Sciences (Anthropology) and a Bachelor's Degree in Anthropology from Georgia Southern University.

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Pooler, United States

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Telfair Museums

Telfair Museums is the oldest public art museum in the Southeast. The legacy of one visionary Savannahian, it was founded in 1883 through the bequest of prominent local philanthropist Mary Telfair-who left her home and its furnishings to the Georgia Historical Society to be opened as a museum. Today, Telfair Museums consists of three unique buildings: the Telfair Academy and the Owens-Thomas House-two National Historic Landmark sites built in the early nineteenth century-and the contemporary Jepson Center. Each of the museum’s three buildings houses a collection corresponding to the era in which it was built. Designed in the Regency style by English architect William Jay, the Telfair Academy houses nineteenth- and twentieth-century American and European art. The Owens-Thomas House, also designed by William Jay but notably different in style, is considered one of the finest examples of English Regency architecture in the country. In addition to the historic house museum-featuring decorative art ranging from the late eighteenth to the early nineteenth century, the site includes rare intact urban slave quarters and a lovely parterre garden. Rounding out the Telfair’s trio of landmark buildings, the Jepson Center is devoted to the art of today. Together, these three unique buildings and three distinct collections bridge three centuries of art and architecture, illustrating the continuum of art and history in Savannah.


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