Fall of Freedom bills itself as “an urgent call to the arts community to unite in defiance of authoritarian forces sweeping the nation.” The organizers aren’t pulling punches: they argue that democracy is under attack, threats to free expression are rising, dissent is being criminalized, and institutions, including the arts, are being bent toward propaganda.
In response, they’ve launched a nationwide wave of creative resistance beginning November 21–22. Across the country, galleries, museums, libraries, comedy clubs, theaters, and concert halls are hosting exhibitions and performances that speak to the urgency of this moment. It’s intentionally decentralized, an open invitation for artists and communities to take part, celebrate identity and culture, and push back against a world that suddenly feels less stable than it once did. Their message is blunt: Art matters. Artists are a threat to American fascism.
This weekend, Richmond joins that movement.
On East Broad Street, ANTENNAE Gallery is hosting the city’s local expression of Fall of Freedom, a curated show bringing together more than a dozen artists, each responding in their own way to the moment.

A Richmond Interpretation of a National Call
For ANTENNAE’s owner, resident artist and curator Todd Hale, the campaign’s framing landed immediately. Though he doesn’t consider himself a political artist in the traditional sense, the spirit behind Fall of Freedom aligned with the themes that have quietly run through his work for years: freedom, unity, expression, and the dignity of simply being able to say what you need to say.
“I always think of my art as political, even though I’m not a political artist,” Hale told me. “It’s political in the sense that it’s about freedom and expression and unity, things that feel like universal truths.”
The idea of hosting a show “in defense of democracy” wasn’t something he expected to feel controversial. But while sharing the promotional poster, Hale ran into a moment that stuck with him: a friend who liked the artists involved, wanted to attend, but hesitated to say out loud that they supported democracy. “Apparently that’s not a given anymore,” he said.
That realization didn’t spark outrage, more a kind of quiet alarm, the sense that the ground has shifted in ways we haven’t fully admitted to ourselves yet. And that’s where the national campaign and Richmond’s iteration overlap: Fall of Freedom isn’t about telling people what to think. It’s about naming something we all feel creeping in at the edges.



The Lineup and the Local Stakes
The show came together fast, just a couple weeks of planning, yet Hale and co-curator Hovey Brock pulled together an impressive lineup: Pia Bakala, Hope Ginsburg, Brian Palmer, Sue Johnson, Aimee Joyaux, Ronald Johnson, Tom Chambers, Gordon Stettinius, Christiane Riederer, Archie Marz, Sirena Pearl, Frankie Slaughter, and others.
Hale is adamant that this isn’t a partisan show. “It’s not a Democrats’ art show,” he said. “This should be for some real basic things that we can agree on if we actually talk about it.”
But for him, this moment is personal, too. He spoke about a family member adopted from Guatemala who lives with a constant fear of being targeted, a fear that shouldn’t exist for someone who is, in every legal sense, fully American. “He could be snatched away anytime he walks outside. That’s insane.”
It’s one example of many pressures people in Richmond navigate quietly every day. And it mirrors the national campaign’s central thesis: the signs are here, and ignoring them won’t make them disappear.



A Show, a Statement, a Starting Point
Fall of Freedom, both nationally and locally, isn’t promising answers. It’s offering a signal, one that’s meant to spark conversation, not shut it down. A space where people can stand in the same room and acknowledge what’s happening around us without retreating into party lines or online noise.
Richmond’s version also goes further by directing proceeds from the onsite bar to a local legal defense fund supporting people harassed by ICE. That’s not performance. That’s real, tangible support for people dealing with the exact pressures the show is responding to.
And for Hale, this likely won’t be the last of its kind. “I have a feeling this isn’t the only one of these we’ll do,” he said. “Now I’m in it.”

Event Details
Fall of Freedom: An Art Show in Defense of Democracy
Opening Reception: Friday, Nov. 21, 6–9 PM
Gallery Hours: Saturday, Nov. 22, 12–6 PM
By Appointment: Nov. 23 – Dec. 1
Location: ANTENNAE — 8 E. Broad Street, Richmond
More info: falloffreedom.com
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