Black American Portraits reframes the history of portraiture to center Black American subjects, sitters, and spaces. The exhibition chronicles the many ways in which Black Americans have used portraiture to envision themselves in their own eyes. Featuring more than 100 works drawn primarily from the permanent collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the exhibition spans more than two centuries and includes nineteenth-century studio photography; portraits from the Harlem Renaissance; images from the Civil Rights, Black Power, and Black Lives Matter eras; pictures of Black celebrities and political figures; and artists’ self-portraits. Countering a visual culture saturated with the spectacle of Black pain, these works instead celebrate joy, abundance, and agency.
This exhibition was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and co-curated by Christine Y. Kim, Britton Family Curator at Large, North American Art, Tate Modern and Liz Andrews, Director, Spelman College Museum of Fine Art. It is curated at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art by Patricia Lee Daigle, Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art.
Black American Portraits is generously presented by Bank of America, can be viewed until January 7, 2024.
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