The reopening of the reimagined African American art galleries marks the first step in a sweeping redesign of the museum’s ...
Art is integral to the Black experience, especially in Black history. Black art offers a unique and powerful perspective for storytelling, cultural expression, and social change that occurs in Black ...
Winter is a perfect time to immerse yourself in thought-provoking exhibitions that center on Black art and storytelling. This season, museums and galleries across the globe are showcasing works that ...
As the art world flocks to Miami Beach for Art Basel, Miamians looking to celebrate and appreciate Black artists during Miami Art Week have a myriad of events where they can view their work. Art ...
In the mid-1960s, as the revolutionary fervor of Black Power intensified, an Afrocentric aesthetic movement was brewing. Poet and playwright Amiri Baraka opened the Black Arts Repertory Theater in ...
The reopening of the Studio Museum in Harlem, after seven years of construction, comes with dazzling alumni and collection shows. The conceptual artist David Hammons created a black, red, and green ...
Point Comfort was anything but comfortable for a group of 20 enslaved Africans who landed on Virginia’s shores in 1619. Their arrival in Hampton, where Point Comfort is located. ushered in an era of ...
When Neil Hall perused the exhibits during Art Basel on Miami Beach back in 2008, he noticed a lack of Black art galleries and artists being featured. “It astounded me because the diaspora has so much ...
Why are we asking for donations? Why are we asking for donations? This site is free thanks to our community of supporters. Voluntary donations from readers like you keep our news accessible for ...
Why are we asking for donations? Why are we asking for donations? This site is free thanks to our community of supporters. Voluntary donations from readers like you keep our news accessible for ...
The James E. Lewis Museum of Art (JELMA) at Morgan State University has opened a landmark exhibition titled, “Keeping the Culture: The Last Twenty-Five Years,” running from Sept. 29 to Dec. 13, 2024.