Skip to content
The Historic New Orleans Collection
A black and white image of a person lying in a hospital bed wearing a nasal oxygen tube. They are covered with a blanket. A hand is gently placed on their chest, indicating care or examination.

Life Means Life

Angola Prison Hospice

October 23, 2024, 6–8 p.m.

520 Royal Street
Registration is free, RSVP required.

Related Exhibition
1937 2 3 o6 Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration
July 19, 2024 to February 16, 2025

“Life Means Life: Angola Prison Hospice” will explore an essential question: is everyone in jail dangerous? Close to 80 percent of men incarcerated at the Louisiana State Penitentiary will die behind bars. In 1998, isolation cells were repurposed as hospice rooms and volunteers from the prison population were trained to provide comfort, care, and last requests to the patients. To raise money for the program, volunteers began sewing and selling quilts. These quilts—and the artists who create them—are the embodiment of creativity, care, and hope.

In this program, artists Steven Garner and Gary Tyler, formerly incarcerated volunteers in the Angola hospice, will share their quilt work and stories with the audience. Photographer Lori Waselchuk will describe her powerful series, Grace Before Dying, which documents the hospice program and explores how the men assert and affirm their humanity and creativity in this environment. Activist Anthony Hingle Jr. will explain how his passion to help others grew while working and caring for men in the infirmary wards and medical dormitories while in Angola. The program will be moderated by Norris Henderson, founder and executive director of Voice of the Experienced (VOTE).

A quilt depicting a tree with red apples, green leaves, and a brown trunk, set against a green landscape with distant mountains and blue sky. The quilt is bordered in brown.
A vibrant quilt depicts large hands releasing butterflies, a central butterfly surrounded by rays, people at a gravesite, a white fence, two horses, and a large key symbol at the bottom, all framed by a chain design on a green background.
A black and white photo of a man and a woman laughing together. The man is wearing a beanie and sweatshirt, and the woman is touching his shoulder, wearing a floral blouse. They are indoors with a painted mural of a house in the background.

This program is presented in conjunction with the exhibition Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration, on view at 520 Royal Street through January 19, 2025. 

At 5 p.m. Captive State will be open to program attendees for a private viewing with curators. All registered attendees are encouraged to arrive early to view the exhibition.  The Shop at the Collection will also be open from 5–6 p.m. At 6 p.m. the panel discussion will begin with a light reception immediately following.

Speakers

A man wearing a blue cap and striped shirt is focused on sewing at a sewing machine. He is seated in a room with a lamp in the background.

Steven Garner

Read More
Smiling man wearing a beige cap and shirt, with a beaded necklace. Colorful abstract art is in the background.

Gary Tyler

Read More
A person with glasses and long wavy hair smiles warmly at the camera. They are wearing a patterned top and orange earrings. The background is blurred greenery.

Lori Waselchuk

Read More
A man in a light blue striped shirt stands in front of a colorful mural featuring various cartoon-like faces. The murals vibrant colors include shades of blue, orange, and purple.

Anthony Hingle Jr.

Read More
An elderly man with a mustache stands in front of a colorful mural featuring various illustrated faces. He is wearing a dark vest over a light shirt and looks directly at the camera.

Norris Henderson

Moderator
Read More

Support

Media Partner
WWL-TV
Exhibition Program Partner
Spark Justice Fund (Borealis Philanthropy)

Related Exhibitions

View More
Exhibitions

Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration

July 19, 2024 to February 16, 2025

Related Books

View More
Books

Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration

CAPTIVE STATE cover

Related Stories

View More
First Draft

Poets Respond to “Captive State” in Verse

First Draft

Inside Angola’s Prison Newspaper, the ‘Angolite’

Related Collection Highlights

View More
A screenshot from a vintage color film shows part of a ship with the name "VERNON C. BAIN" written on the side.

“Vernon C. Bain” Christening Ceremony Video

When New York City’s war on drugs sent incarceration rates soaring, officials commissioned a floating jail built and christened downriver from New Orleans.

The cover of the newspaper "Hospital Banner" from August of 1955.

Hospital Banner Newsletters

An unusual periodical, written and produced by residents of the state mental hospital in the mid-20th century

Related News

View More
A historical museum exhibit features a large black-and-white photograph of an old prison building. In front, there is a wooden stock used for restraining prisoners, with openings for neck and wrists. The quote on the photo describes the harsh prison conditions.
HNOC in the News

Louisiana Weekly: HNOC Receives LEH Award for Louisiana Mass Incarceration Exhibit

January 29, 2026
Officials praised “Captive State” for addressing a difficult and often polarizing subject with scholarly depth while remaining accessible to a broad audience.
Innocence & Justice Louisiana presented HNOC with the John Thompson Award for Courage and Justice at the “Oh, Freedom!” Gala on September 13, 2025.
Press Release

HNOC Awarded John Thompson Award for Courage & Justice

September 22, 2025
Presented by Innocence & Justice Louisiana, the honor was received for HNOC’s “Captive State” exhibition and companion book that confront the historical roots of mass incarceration in Louisiana.
Carceral City book cover
Press Release

HNOC, LHA Select “The Carceral City” to Receive 2024 Williams Prize

March 19, 2025
With powerful and evocative prose, author John K. Bardes boldly reinterprets relations between slavery and prison development in American history.
Stay Connected

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Esto 2019 JG23 544 o6