Four Artists on Gender and Sexuality in the African Diaspora
“You are worthy. You count. Nobody has the right to undermine you—because of your being, because of your race, because of your gender expression, because of your sexuality, because of …
“You are worthy. You count. Nobody has the right to undermine you—because of your being, because of your race, because of your gender expression, because of your sexuality, because of …
Amy Feldman brings humor into the art world with her large-scale cartoonish paintings.
Park McArthur’s work shifts and alters to respond to the institutional and architectural context of exhibitions spaces, complicating the exhibition space as a work of art itself. Her work often …
When art reflects the experiences of the artist, it presents a true and authentic representation of the character of the artist; the struggles they faced growing up and becoming an …
How do we interact with the spaces around us? Aakash Nihalani brings new perspective to our involvement and interplay with our surroundings.
Themes of color, traverse spaces, simplistic silhouettes of figures, quick brushstrokes that sweep across the cheek of the sitter, contrasted with a small, detailed, perfectly rendered eye, make up Loribelle …
Christina Quarles creates ambiguous distortions of bodies to dismantle subjectivity of identity.
Text and images do not always work together; Dena Yago exposes the inflective relationship between words and visuals.
Hayden Dunham’s work explores the consequences of our environmental surroundings on movement and form.
Unpredictable loss in Alyssa Monks’s life has allowed her to embrace impurities and imperfections of human experience.
Paul Mpagi Sepuya’s portraits focus on the relationship between photographer and photographed to capture the essence of a subject.
Harden Meyer captures faces in his “Portraits” illustrations. A face can tell you a detailed story of a person’s life. Meyer did an excellent job of capturing emotion in a …