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Home > Special Collections > Special Collections at Zach S. Henderson Library (Statesboro) > Savannah Signs Project

Waddie Welcome Collection- Savannah Signs Project

The Waddie Welcome collection is founded upon a core collection of 750 photographs as well as actual examples of hand-painted public signs from Savannah, Georgia. Most of the signs in the initial archive were photographed by Tom Kohler and Susan Earl, but other photographs of hand-painted signs in Savannah and elsewhere have been added to the database.

The urban space and the ‘semiotics’ or signs defining that space has been the subject of numerous academic studies. Historians of the Roman Empire or Ancient Greece and Egypt often highlight the tensions between official public inscriptions on buildings, tombs and monuments and the remains of commercial signage and personal graffiti. Across the world, religious institutions have often used inscriptions and images to create a public presence and memory, to mark territory and sacred space. Commercial entities followed suit, creating a veritable forest of signs in urban space. Before street signs, in England for example, one could tell a friend to “meet me at the sign of the Crown”—a pub, a coffeehouse, a bookstore. We have become so inured to the presence of the signs of national and global brands that it is hard to recognize the ways that signs shape our everyday lives.

Signs, their images and their fonts, form part of our daily vocabulary, the language through which we live. In this exhibit, hand-painted signs from African-American businesses, homes, churches and other buildings in Savannah give a sense of the "beloved community"—a local visual and interpersonal language of space, unique to a particular place and time. The images tell a great deal about hopes, dreams, desires, realities of life in this community between the 1970's and 1990's, while the fonts used suggest a practice of public writing that has its own particular style and community significance. Many of these signs are disappearing due to zoning regulations, changing neighborhood populations and the spread of a more global and at times more generic consumer culture. The Waddie Welcome collection is an effort to preserve a crucial part of the culture and history of Savannah and the Georgia Low Country in general.

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  • Cool AC

    Cool AC

  • Corner of restaurant

    Corner of restaurant

  • Cottage

    Cottage

  • Couch next to payphone

    Couch next to payphone

  • Crab

    Crab

  • Crab

    Crab

  • Crab and shrimp

    Crab and shrimp

  • Crab Boil

    Crab Boil

  • Crab boil

    Crab boil

  • Crab catching

    Crab catching

  • Crab graffiti

    Crab graffiti

  • Crab graffiti

    Crab graffiti

  • Crab holding globe

    Crab holding globe

  • Crab holding world

    Crab holding world

  • Crabs around cooking pot

    Crabs around cooking pot

  • Crabs on window

    Crabs on window

  • Creole red

    Creole red

  • Creole red

    Creole red

  • Cross

    Cross

  • Cross

    Cross

  • Cross on van door

    Cross on van door

  • Crouching man

    Crouching man

  • Crouching man with blood drops

    Crouching man with blood drops

  • Curling iron

    Curling iron

  • Cuzzins

    Cuzzins

 

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