Winter 2026
We are in the final countdown for our semiquincentennial exhibition, For Which It Stands... I have been working on this exhibition for five years, and am very excited to see my vision realized.
It opens the evening of January 22nd, and it will be on view throughout the spring until July 25th. I hope you will come and see it, and share your thoughts with us.
A robust array of programming has been created to accompany this exhibition, so we hope you will come back again and again to be a part of the conversation. There will be gallery talks with pairs of contemporary artists whose work is included in the exhibition, lectures, our beloved Art In Focus series with Michelle DiMarzo, as well as Family Days. I will also be doing tours of the exhibition.
A film screening and panel conversation about Reclaim the Flag (2025) is our first event. It is co-sponsored by the Museum and the Quick Center for the Arts, and will take place on January 29th at 7:30 pm. in the Kelley Theatre.
As you may have read in local news outlets, the University and the museum have recently accepted the donation of a Holocaust memorial sculpture honoring the courage and dignity of women and children affected by the Holocaust. It will be installed at Fairfield University in the fall of this year.
The sculpture depicts a photograph taken of five Holocaust victims in Latvia who historians believe are showing quiet defiance. After the Nazis began their invasion of the Soviet Union, thousands of Jews in the nation were murdered or deported. Many of the killings were conducted publicly near the city of Liepāja, including 2,749 people — mostly women and children — who were massacred on the beach at Šķēde over the course of three days in December 1941.
The victims were forced to undress down to their underclothes and march to the edge of trenches in groups of 10. There, they were methodically executed by gunfire and buried. A Nazi photographer took pictures of many of them before their deaths.
One photograph, showing four women and a 10-year-old girl huddled together, came to signify hope, courage, and dignity in the face of death. At the center of the group is Frume Purve, an older woman who is still wearing her boots.
Historians have concluded that Purve refused to take off the boots, and that her example seemingly encouraged stoicism among those standing with her. The others in the group were identified as Sorella Epstein, Roza Epstein, Mia-Malka Epstein, and Emma Epstein, all members of the same family.
The Museum is honored to accept this monument, entitled "She Would Not Take Off Her Boots," by painter and sculptor Victoria Milstein, and to have it take its place among our outdoor sculptures on campus this fall, and look forward to sharing the educational opportunities this artwork brings with all of our communities — on campus, across Connecticut, and beyond. We are grateful to Paul Burger, a Fairfield native, who founded Shoah Memorial Fairfield in order to be able to gift this sculpture to the University. The artwork will serve as a reminder to stand against injustice and promote peace.
Looking forward to seeing you in the Galleries!
Artfully yours, Carey Weber











