family connection By
Susan Grandpre

Photos From the Heart
Two brothers, ages 6 and 7, hold hands in a photograph. It’s clear
how much they love and need each other. A photo of six siblings displays
the strength of each child. The face of four-year-old Juanita transforms
the room.
This is the Heart Gallery, an exhibit hosted by the Children’s Museum of
Richmond that displays portraits of 24 children awaiting adoption in the
tri-cities area. They all share the hope that someone will see their
photo at the exhibit, read a short narrative about them and then inquire
about adopting them.
The portraits were all taken by local photographers who donated their
time and talents to the Heart Gallery. The photographs, some taken in
black and white and others in color, capture the individual spirit of
each child. They are professionally mounted and framed by a local
business.
The Heart Gallery concept began in Santa Fe, N.M., in March of 2001.
Since that exhibit’s inception, Heart Galleries have opened in 48 states
around the country featuring children in those specific geographic
regions who await adoption. To the Heart Gallery’s credit, the project
has met with great success, finding families for more than 1000
children.
The mission of each Heart Gallery is twofold: to raise the awareness of
the need for permanent loving families for the many children living in
foster care while awaiting adoption, and to find families for the
specific children pictured.
The Richmond-area Heart Gallery serves as another avenue to inform
people that on average more than 1500 children in Virginia live without
their biological families while needing and deserving a loving and safe
family to call their own.
Many of the children featured in the Heart Gallery are children
considered to be difficult to place either because they are part of a
sibling group or because they are older children who simply tend to be
harder to place because of their age and not through any fault of their
own.
The Heart Gallery will be display at the Children’s Museum of Richmond
until November 16. Other venues are being planned for the future.
More information about Heart Galleries throughout the state can be found
through the Virginia Department of Social Services website at
www.dss.virginia.gov.
Susan Grandpre earned a B.A. in English from James
Madison University and has been a freelance writer for nine years. She
lives in Richmond with her husband and three children.
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