Tamara Natalie Madden | Artist

Tamara Natalie Madden was born in St. Andrew, Jamaica and raised in Manchester, Jamaica. It was during her childhood in Manchester that Madden was exposed to her first artistic influences. Transitions brought her to the United States of America where she continued to pursue art during her high school years, studying advanced literature, photography and […]

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Jerry Lynn | Artist

Identical twin brothers Jerry Lynn and Terry Lynn, make up the artistic duo known as Twin and theirs is one of the most incredible stories in the art industry. Each brother is a talented artist in his own right, but it’s their collaborative painting technique that has captured the attention of major collectors, institutes, and […]

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In a First, Auction House Devoted Solely to Black Art Is Launched by Indianapolis Dealer | ARTnews

By Angelica Villa, ARTnews Historically, there have been no auction houses in the United States devoted entirely to selling work by black artists—until now. The new Indianapolis-based Black Art Auction house aims to fill that gap, and it’s launching its inaugural sale on Saturday with a sale of art spanning the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. With […]

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The Promissory Note and Notes on Jacob Lawrence’s “The Architect, 1959” | The Massachusetts Review

By Kymberly S. Newberry, The Massachusetts Review In the summer of 1941, A. Philip Randolph, founder of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, called for a march on Washington to draw attention to the exclusion of African Americans from positions in the national defense industry, then a feverishly growing enterprise supplying material to the Allies […]

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Jordan Casteel on the Power of Art Right Now | Elle

By Leah Melby Clinton, Elle Amongst the never-ending, century-spanning talk about what art means—the ways it can impact society; how to define it—today’s political climate has us looking to gallery walls with an even sharper eye. What is the artist’s role in everything that’s happening out there? Recording, parsing, distracting? “If anything, for me, it has […]

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A black female cartoonist brings her ‘unique’ take to the New Yorker | The Washington Post

In the first cartoon Elizabeth Montague published in the New Yorker, two black women stand on a rooftop that overlooks a darkened cityscape. Above them, a Batman-inspired spotlight beams a message into the night sky: PER MY LAST EMAIL. Beneath them, the caption reads: “We’ve done all we can. It’s out of our hands now.” […]

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How Late Curator and Artist David C. Driskell Changed Art History Forever | ARTnews

Pamela Newkirk, a professor of journalism at New York University, is the author of Spectacle: The Astonishing Life of Ota Benga and, most recently, of Diversity Inc: The Failed Promise of a Billion-Dollar Business. She is currently at work on a biography of the late curator, scholar, artist, and collector David C. Driskell. A 1976 archival film captures a young […]

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How Arthur Lewis built a dynamic collection of black art | Artsy

The front door of Arthur Lewis’s Los Angeles home opens to a room organized like an exhibition space. The marks of domesticity—dining room table, mantel, fireplace, throw pillows—are present, but engulfed by art. Paintings and sculptures grab all the attention, and maybe the intention, of the space. Titus Kaphar’s Enough About You (2016) greets your first glance. […]

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