Black Culture Celebrated

SDCC’s blog highlighting the phenomenal creativity found throughout the African Diaspora.

A Window In: LaToya Ruby Frazier

A Window In: LaToya Ruby Frazier

LaToya Ruby Frazier asks “What is the responsibility of an artist to her community?” Frazier takes on Levi’s clothing company...

Love is the Message, The Message is Death

Love is the Message, The Message is Death

Arthur Jafa’s Renowned β€œLove is the Message, The Message is Death” to Be Streamed Continuously Online for the First Time,...

SOURCES of SELF-REGARD

SOURCES of SELF-REGARD

Self-Portraits From Black Photographers Reflecting on America Dallas’s own Nitashia Johnson is featured in an online article/exhibition by the New...

A Window In: Jordan Casteel

A Window In: Jordan Casteel

“There is a value in just being.” Jordan Casteel’s work elevates the “Everyday man” on a monumental scale. Much like...

RIFF and RELATIONS

RIFF and RELATIONS

The Phillips Collection presents the work of guest curator Dr. Adrienne L. Childs in the thought provoking exhibition Riffs and...

Le coeur de l’Afrique | The Heart of Africa

Le coeur de l’Afrique | The Heart of Africa

Congolese fashion designer Anifa Mvuemba releases her new Pink Label line in a virtually visually creative way. A 3D fashion...

Music Makes the World Go Round: Verzuz Battles

Music Makes the World Go Round: Verzuz Battles

Verzuz is a platform for hip hop heads, sound aficionados, rhythm and blues virtuoso’s, and straight up music junkies of,...

A Window In: Kerry James Marshall

A Window In: Kerry James Marshall

Kerry James Marshall is one of the leading voices in modern art. He shares his thoughts around the “mythology” of...

A Window In: El Anatsui

A Window In: El Anatsui

Β  Ghanaian sculptor, El Anatsui, has garnered international attention for his bottle-top installations, works consisting of thousands of metal pieces...

Against The Odds: Artists Of The Harlem Renaissance

Against The Odds: Artists Of The Harlem Renaissance

  Harlem in the 1920s and 1930s was the scene of a passionate outburst of creativity by African-American visual artists....

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