The exhibition-as-memoir of Linda Griggs, a group show as history lesson, Odili Donald Odita’s vibrant abstractions, and more ...
In this interview, Bolden discussed her nontraditional path to the bench and her mission to leave the door open for others ...
This A-Z guide is your ticket to the week’s most compelling corners: the shows, the surprises, and the spots to sip, savor, ...
Opened in 2016, the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., tells America’s story through the lens of Black experience. That story, and the NMAAHC itself, is for ...
Richard T. Greener was Harvard University’s first Black graduate who blazed the trail for these intelligent women to continue his legacy.
Alonzo Davis, the artist and educator who cofounded Los Angeles's storied African American stronghold the Brockman Gallery, ...
The Amy Sherald SFMOMA show is the artist's largest to date, featuring her Michelle Obama and Breonna Taylor paintings.
When educator Jane Dabney Shackelford wrote and published The Child’s Story of the Negro and Helen Adele Whiting wrote Negro Folk Tales for Pupils in the Primary Grades and Negro Art, Music and Rhyme ...
Hanes Art Gallery at Wake Forest University is pleased to announce the opening of ”Young, Gifted and Black: The ...
Perry took on misconceptions about the South (and won the National Book Award) with “South to America.” In “Black in Blues” ...
Bey’s show gets its name from a passage in the second stanza of “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” the hymn by James Weldon Johnson ...
Phillip A. Townsend, curator at UT-Austin’s Art Galleries at Black Studies, takes that question further. He asks, what about ...