Amistad
Amistad (1997) is a historical drama directed by Steven Spielberg, based on the heroic, true story of the Mende people who were kidnapped in West Africa and illegally sold into slavery in 1839. After being transported across the Atlantic Ocean and resold in Cuba, the captured Mende people, under the leadership of Joseph Cinqué, rebelled and took control of their captors' ship, a Spanish vessel named La Amistad. After several days at sea, the vessel was intercepted by a U.S. customs ship and the Mende and surviving Spanish crew were taken to port in New Haven, Connecticut. Abolitionists formed the Amistad Committee and collected money to mount a judicial defense for the Mende people. A court case ensued and was ultimately resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1841, a ruling that restored the Mende people's freedom.
Carter was nominated for an Academy Award for her costumes in Amistad. This was her second nomination.
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Ruth E. Carter's mood board for the captured Africans.
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Part of a series of murals, completed in 1938, by Hale Woodruff commemorating the Amistad uprising.
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Mood board by Ruth E. Carter
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Sketch by Carter in collaboration with artist Gina Flanagan. The sketch is signed by Anthony Hopkins
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Carter’s mood board for Martin Van Buren
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Portrait of Isabel II of Spain by Carlos Luis de Ribera y Fieve, circa 1835