
The moss that guides you. Photo: Courtesy of Simone Barros
A Northeast Ohio filmmaker has found a new way to tell the incredible story of the Underground Railroad.
Why it matters: Ohio was an active stop on the secret network of routes abolitionists used to help fugitive slaves escape the South during the 1800s.
The intrigue: Simone Barros' experimental documentary "The Dead Will Show You the Way: A Fugue for Moss and Memory" showcases how escaped slaves used forest moss (which grows thicker on the north side of trees) as a navigation tool.
What they're saying: "I really wanted to focus on moss as a character, by getting into the deep understandings of it," Barros tells Axios.
Between the lines: The project earned Barros, a former faculty member at the Cleveland Institute of Art and Cuyahoga Community College, the Ohio Humanities Film Fellowship at Ohio State University's Wexner Center for the Arts.
"Experimental art requires a great deal of concentration and time," says Barros, who began working on her film in 2015.
What's next: Barros says "The Dead Will Show You the Way" is in its post-production phase.