Art Fairs

IFPDA Print Fair 2022

IFPDA Print Fair 2022


October 27th – 30th
Javits Center, New York, NY
Booth #215

VIP Preview Day
Thursday, October 27th 12 pm – 8 pm

Public Hours
Friday, October 28th 11 am – 7 pm
Saturday, October 29th 11 am – 7 pm
Sunday, October 30th 11 am – 5 pm
Ticket information

Featured are prints by artists

Artist

Ontology: Communal Expressions of Being About the Artists

Ontology: Communal Expressions of Being – About the Artists

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Lavett Ballard is a mixed media artist who describes her work as a re-imagined visual narrative of African descent people. Ballard’s use of imagery reflects social issues affecting primarily Black women.

Wesley Clark is a conceptual artist whose work challenges and draws parallels between historical and contemporary cultural issues. Clark’s primary focus surrounds blacks in America and the African Diaspora. He examines the young black male psyche and the feeling of being a target.

Alfred Conteh is a painter who presents visual explorations of how people from the African Diaspora societies living in the South are fighting social, economic, educational, and psychological wars from within and without to survive.

Susan Goldman is a printmaker whose “Squaring the Flower” series explores geometry and decorative form. Love of pattern and underlying passion for color and beauty informs playful layering and improvisation. The flower gets stripped away, covered up, and over-printed, yet it always finds a way back in, like a melodious refrain or a cherry blossom in springtime.

Michael Gross is a painter and printmaker whose intensely colorful works are frenetic studies of light and movement. For Gross, every piece attempts to capture a moment of equilibrium, a kind of elegant balance in time and space, and record it permanently.

Michael Gross
The Measure of a Man, 2018
Oil and acrylic on canvas, 72 x 48″



M. Scott Johnson is a photographer and sculptor. As a photographer, Johnson navigates and interprets light, space, and soul in his Landscape Astrophotography series, which represents a yearly pilgrimage to the dark sky of New York’s Adirondack Park, where he captures the rising of the planet Venus in the Northern Hemisphere. As a sculptor, Johnson’s aesthetic and philosophical explorations are shaped by the landscape of his atavistic memories.

Megan Lewis is a painter whose work is a visual series built on her curiosities, experiences, memories, and thought processes. Gathering what she has known to be true becomes the foundation and framework of her artistry. Lewis creates work to express and share her joys.

Delita Martin is a printmaker who portrays Black women as magical beings that possess the power to transcend their black skin and exist in a spiritual form. Through the weaving of history and storytelling, Martin’s work offers narratives on the power of women whose stories are not only layered in textures and techniques but also symbolism.

Arvie Smith is a painter who works transforms the history of oppressed and stereotyped segments of the American experience into lyrical two-dimensional masterworks. Smith’s work is commonly of psychological images revealing deep sympathy for the dispossessed and marginalized members of society in an unrelenting search for beauty, meaning, and equality.

Nelson Stevens is a painter and member of AfriCOBRA (African Commune for Bad Relevant Artists) whose aesthetic is rooted in activism and a commitment to create imagery that rails against racism through positive, powerful, and uplifting imagery.

Felandus Thames is a conceptual artist whose work transcends didacticisms that are typically associated with anachronistic understandings of representation and instead aligns itself with ideas around the taxonomy of human difference. Thames is also interested in the interplay between the personal narrative and the imagined, uses humor to allow the viewer to ease into disconcerting motifs.

Exhibitions

Ontology: Communal Expressions of Being

Ontology: Communal Expressions of Being

February 19th – April 30, 2022

FEATURED ARTISTS
Lavett Ballard | Wesley Clark | Alfred Conteh
Susan Goldman | Michael Gross | M. Scott Johnson
Megan Lewis | Delita Martin | Arvie Smith
Nelson Stevens | Felandus Thames

about the artist | view artwork

This group exhibition explores concepts of existence and being, drawing inspiration from the metaphysical theory of ontology, the study of the nature of things, and their reality, identity, and relatedness.

In this exhibit, visual narratives conceived in conceptual work, paintings, prints, photography, and sculpture draw parallels between shared occurrences and belief systems derived from the artists’ personal experiences and convictions. Here the theory of ontology will be tested and either accepted or rejected as truth, as we question, do our human experiences inextricably link us? Discourse on the notion of communal expressions will challenge relatedness. And social constructionism leads the debate on what defines being, reality, and identity.


Megan Lewis
Calm, 2021
Oil and acrylic on canvas
60 x 36 ″

Renaissance: Noir at UTA Artist Space, Beverly Hills, CA…

UTA Artist Space is pleased to present Renaissance: Noir, a virtual exhibition featuring works by 12 emerging Black artists, live on UTAArtistSpace.com from June 9 – July 3, 2020. Curated by Myrtis Bedolla, Baltimore-based owner of Galerie Myrtis, Renaissance: Noir investigates Blackness on the continuum of the historiographies of Black artists’ narratives that assert, individually and collectively, their state-of-mind and state-of-being Black. The timeliness of the exhibition is particularly significant, as its launch comes amidst a heightened awareness of racial injustice against the Black community, with protests occurring around the world. The show marks UTA Artist Space’s first full virtual exhibition.

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The artists highlighted in Renaissance: Noir are Tawny Chatmon, Wesley Clark, Alfred Conteh, Larry Cook, Morel Doucet, Monica Ikegwu, Ronald Jackson, M. Scott Johnson, Delita Martin, Arvie Smith, Nelson Stevens, and Felandus Thames. Their work collectively captures the existence of “double consciousness,” as coined by W.E.B. DuBois, where one is constantly combating the “isms” —racism, colorism, sexism, capitalism, colonialism, escapism, and criticism through the act of artistic activism.

Exhibitions

Renaissance Noir UTA Artist Space

Renaissance: Noir
UTA Artist Space, Beverly Hills, CA
Curated by Myrtis Bedolla

UTA Artist Space is pleased to present Renaissance: Noir, a virtual exhibition featuring works by 12 emerging Black artists, live on UTAArtistSpace.com from June 9 – July 3, 2020. Curated by Myrtis Bedolla, Baltimore-based owner of Galerie Myrtis, Renaissance: Noir investigates Blackness on the continuum of the historiographies of Black artists’ narratives that assert, individually and collectively, their state-of-mind and state-of-being Black. The timeliness of the exhibition is particularly significant, as its launch comes amidst a heightened awareness of racial injustice against the Black community, with protests occurring around the world. The show marks UTA Artist Space’s first full virtual exhibition.

view the exhibition

The artists highlighted in Renaissance: Noir are Tawny Chatmon, Wesley Clark, Alfred Conteh, Larry Cook, Morel Doucet, Monica Ikegwu, Ronald Jackson, M. Scott Johnson, Delita Martin, Arvie Smith, Nelson Stevens, and Felandus Thames. Their work collectively captures the existence of “double consciousness,” as coined by W.E.B. DuBois, where one is constantly combating the “isms” —racism, colorism, sexism, capitalism, colonialism, escapism, and criticism through the act of artistic activism.

Renaissance: Noir Blackness on the Continuum


by Myrtis Bedolla, Curator

Tea with Myrtis – Artists’ Talk: Members of AfriCOBRA

Tea with Myrtis: Artists’ Talk: Members of AfriCOBRA discuss the history and mission of the collective, and their role in shaping the Black Arts Movement. Melanee Harvey, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Art History, Howard University joins the conversation. Dr. Harvey authored the essay for the exhibition catalogue AfriCOBRA is a continuum: The Fifty-Year Legacy of the African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists. Myrtis Bedolla, Curator will moderator the discussion. Registration is Required- Seating is Limited

Tea served with savory treats starting at 3:00pm • Discussion begins at 3:30pm

$20 per person

 
Galerie Myrtis extends a special thanks to Darryl Gorman for sponsoring the event.
 

Renee Stout
The Time She Saw too Much, 2010
Acrylic, oil paint, colored pencil and collage on wood panel
36 x 36 inches

AfriCOBRA: The Evolution of a Movement

Opening Reception
September 15th, 5:00 – 7:00 pm

Tea with MyrtisRegistration Required
October 13th, 3:00pm – 5:00pm

Featured Artists (year of membership)
Akili Ron Anderson (1979), Kevin Cole (2003), Adger Cowans (1978), Michael D. Harris (1979), Napoleon Jones-Henderson (founding member, 1968), James Phillips (1973), Frank Smith (1973), Nelson Stevens (founding member, 1968), and Renee Stout (2017)

AfriCOBRA

AfriCOBRA Biographies of Artists


September 15 – October 27th, 2018

Featured Artists (year of membership)
Akili Ron Anderson (1979), Kevin Cole (2003), Adger Cowans (1978), Michael D. Harris (1979), Napoleon Jones-Henderson (founding member, 1968), James Phillips (1973), Frank Smith (1973), Nelson Stevens (founding member, 1968), and Renee Stout (2017)

artwork | artists | artists’ talk | photos | catalogue | about AFRICOBRA






Biographies of the Artists

Akili Ron Anderson
Born in 1946 in Washington, DC
Lives and works in Washington, DC
AfriCOBRA Member: 1979

Akili Ron Anderson studied at the Corcoran School of Art, Washington, DC (1964-65), and graduated from Howard University, Washington, DC (BFA 1969), (MFA 2008).

His solo exhibitions include Akili Ron Anderson: A Fifty Year Retrospective of Black Art and Life (2016; Hampton University Museum, Hampton, VA); Paintings for Projection (1973; The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC); and solo exhibitions at The New Muse (1977; New York, NY); Miya Gallery (1975; Washington, DC); Weusi Gallery (1975; New York, NY); Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corp. (1975; New York, NY); Metropolitan Applied Research Center (1975; New York, NY); Howard University Gallery of Art (1973; Washington, DC); and Duke University (1969; Durham, NC)

Anderson’s work has been included in several group exhibitions, including AfriCOBRA Now: Works on Paper (2016; Hearne Fine Art, Little Rock, AR); It Takes a Nation: Art for Social Justice (2016; American University Museum, Washington, DC); From the Ashes: Rebirth of the Human Spirit  (2014; The Pepco Edison Place Gallery, Washington, DC); We Speak the Souls of Ancestors  (2013; DC Commission on the Art and Humanities, Washington, DC);  Three Decades of American Printmaking: The Brandywine Workshop (2013; Philadelphia Museum of Art); AfriCOBRA Now: Contemporary American Works Rooted in Africa (2007; Hampton University Museum, VA); Art is Service of the Lord (1995; Schomburg Museum, New York, NY); and has shown at the Kreeger Museum (2011; Washington, DC); the Anacostia Museum (1999; Washington, DC); the Orlando Museum of Art (1997, Orlando, FL); and the F. Bader Gallery (1974; Washington, DC).


Kevin Cole
Born 1960 in Pine Bluff, AR
Lives and works in Atlanta
AfriCOBRA Member: 2003

Kevin Cole graduated from the University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff (BS 1982); the University of Illinois, Champaign (MA 1983); and Northern Illinois University, Dekalb (MFA 1985).

His solo exhibitions include Blanket Series (2018; Dinah Washington Cultural Art Center, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL); Sound tracks of Color (2017; Plano Art Center, Plano, TX); Living off the Wall (2014; 10th Street Gallery, St. Louis, MO); and Beneath the Sound of Color (2007; Hearne Fine Arts, Little Rock, AR).

Cole’s work has been included in group exhibitions, including Outside the Lines, (2013-2014; Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Valerie Cassel Oliver, Curator, Houston, TX); Fragments of Frozen Sound (2008; Sande Webster Gallery, Philadelphia); In Context: The Language of Abstraction (2008; Abrons Arts Center, New York); AfriCOBRA Now: Contemporary American Works Rooted in Africa (2007; Hampton University Museum, VA); Kevin Cole and Alonzo Davis (2206; Old Dillard Museum, Fort Lauderdale, FL); Different Way of Seeing (2006; Noyes Museum of Art, Oceanville, NJ) and Absence of Color (2001; Philadelphia Museum of Art).

In 2018, Kevin Cole was inducted into the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame.


Adger Cowans
Born in 1936 in Columbus, OH
Lives and works in New York, NY
AfriCOBRA Member: 1978

Adger Cowens graduated from Ohio University (BFA, 1958).

His solo exhibitions include Running Deep (2007; Philips Museum of Art, Lancaster, PA); Adger Cowans (2005; Hearne Fine Art Gallery, Little Rock, AR); Adger Cowans (2001; Ronald M. Ollie Collection); Captured Moments (1989; June Kelly Gallery, New York, NY); Adger Cowans (1989; Gordon Parks Gallery, Yonkers, NY); Adger Cowans (1963; Raymond Kerr Gallery, New York, NY); Moments (1981; Greenspace Gallery, New York, NY); Adger Cowans (1977; Jade Gallery, Pittsburgh, PA); Adger Cowans (1975; Shado Gallery, Oregon City, OR); Adger Cowans (1967; Friends Gallery (James Van Der Zee) New York, NY); and Adger Cowans (1965; Heliography Gallery, New York, NY)

Cowans’s work has been included in several group exhibitions, including Audioacity: Music as Muse (2011; Sande Webster Gallery, Philadelphia, PA); Elements of Soul (2011; Chashama Gallery, New York, NY); Two Decades of Excellence (2008-09; Hearne Fine Arts Gallery, Little Rock, AR); Apart Together (2008; A.P. Garcia Gallery, New York, NY); AfriCOBRA: Contemporary American Work Rooted in Africa (2007; Hampton University Museum, Hampton, VA); Committed to the Image: Contemporary Black Photography (2001; Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York, NY); A History of African-American Photography (1999-2000; The Smithsonian Institution; Washington, DC); Locating the Spirit; Religion and Spirituality in African-American Art (1999; Anacostia Museum, Washington, DC); and he has shown at The Studio Museum in Harlem (1973; New York, NY); and the George Eastman Gallery House (1963; Rochester, NY).


Michael D. Harris
Born in 1948 in
Lives and works in Atlanta
AfriCOBRA Member: 1979

Dr. Michael D. Harris graduated from Bowling Green State University (BS, 1971), Howard University (MFA, 1979), Yale University (MA, African American Studies, 1989), (MA, History of Art, 1990), (M.Phil, History of Art, 1991), (PhD, 1996).

His solo exhibitions include Art Portraits/Portraits of the Artist (2017-2018; September Gray Gallery, Atlanta, GA); Equal Rites: The Art of Michael D. Harris (2011-2012; Hammonds House Galleries, Atlanta, GA); Blues People (2005; The Beach Institute, Savannah, GA); and Letters from Home (2004; Sonja Hanes Center for Black Culture, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC).

Harris’s work has been included in several group exhibitions, including Portraits of Who We Are (2018; David Driskell Center, University of Maryland ); AfriCOBRA Now: Works on Paper (2016; Hearne Fine Art, Little Rock, AR); AfriCOBRA: Art for the People (2015; Harvey B. Gantt Center for African American Art and Culture); 2ATW: Two Artists, Two Works (2014; Center for the Art of Africa and It’s Diaspora, University of Texas, Austin); AfriCOBRA: Art and Impact (2013; The DuSable Museum, Chicago, IL); Artifical Afrika (2006; Gigantic Art Space, New York, NY); The Road In Sight: Contemporary Art in North Carolina (2005; Duke University, Durham, NC); Blackness in Color: Visual Expressions of the Black Arts Movement (2000; Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University); Three Shades of Black (2000; Denver Art Museum, CO);  AfriCOBRA and Group Fromaje, Esthetique Universelle, Universal Aesthetics (1989; Howard University, Washington, DC); and An Exhibition of Photographs Selected From Black Photographer’s Annual Volume II (1974; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY).

Dr. Michael D. Harris was also named to the list of curators and scholars, “25 Who Made A Difference,” in the fall 2001 issue of International Review of African American Art.


Napoleon Jones-Henderson
Born in 1943 in Chicago, IL
Lives and works in Roxbury, MA
AfriCOBRA Member: (founding member, 1968)

Napoleon Jones-Henderson studied at the Sorbonne Student Continuum-Student and Artists Center, Paris, France  (1963), and Northern Illinois University (1974). He graduated from the Art Institute of Chicago (BFA, 1971), and the Maryland Institute College of Art (MFA, 2005).

His work has been included in several group exhibitions, including AfriCOBRA Now: Works on Paper (2016; Hearne Fine Art Gallery, Little Rock, AR); For Whom It Stands, Too (2014; Star-Spangled Banner Flag House & Museum, Baltimore, MD); AfriCOBRA: Art and Impact (2013; The DuSable Museum of African American History, Chicago, IL); AfriCOBRA: Revolutionary Images (2007; Hampton University Museum, Hampton, VA); Living Legends (2007; King Arts Complex, Columbus, OH); and has exhibited at the Ohio Crafts Museum (2014; Columbus, OH); Museum of Afro-American Art and Culture (2006; Philadelphia, PA); Rhode Island College (2006; Providence, RI); the Maryland Federation of Artists (2005; Baltimore, MD); and the Maryland Institute College of Art (2005; Baltimore, MD). His solo show, Showin Up and Showin Out, was featured at the Roxbury Community College (2016; Roxbury, MA).

Jones-Henderson’s work has also been acquired by numerous institutional collections, including the Brooklyn Museum, DuSable Museum of African American History, the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, and the Brandywine Print Archive.


James Phillips
Born 1945 in Brooklyn
Lives and works in Baltimore
AfriCOBRA Member: 1973

James Phillips studied at the Fleisher Art Memorial School, Philadelphia (1960s), the Philadelphia College of Art (1964-65), and the Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore (MFA 1998).

His solo exhibitions include Homecoming: Da Homey Comes Home: Works by James Phillips (2012; Africa House, Lynchburg, VA); Works on Paper (1996; Parish Gallery, Washington DC); The Awesome Image: Old and New Paintings by James Phillips (1995; Hampton University Museum, VA); James Phillips (1991; Harrison Museum of African American Culture, Roanoke, VA); and James Phillips, AfriCobra Abstractionist (1991; Hammond House, Atlanta).

Phillip’s work has been featured in several group exhibitions, including Outside the Lines, (2013-2014; Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Valerie Cassel Oliver, Curator, Houston, TX); AfriCobra and the Chicago Black Arts Movement (2010; Dittmar Memorial Gallery, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL); Silent Voices, Loud Echoes (2006; African American Historical and Cultural Museum, Philadelphia); Black Art, Ancestral Legacy: The African Impulse in African American Art (1989; Dallas Museum of Art); Tradition and Conflict, 1963-1973 (1985; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York); and Directions in Afro American Art (1974; Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY).

Works in are in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture and University of Maryland University College.


Frank Smith
Born 1939 in Chicago
Lives and works in Rock Cave, WV
AfriCOBRA Member: 1973

Frank Smith graduated from the University of Illinois, Chicago (BFA 1958), and Howard University, Washington, D.C. (MFA 1972).

His work has been featured in several group exhibitions, including Outside the Lines, (2013-2014; Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Valerie Cassel Oliver, Curator, Houston, TX); AfriCOBRA: Art & Impact (2013, DuSable Museum of African American History, Chicago, IL); Beyond: a Symposium on the Impact of the Black Power Movement on America (2009; Smithsonian National Museum of African American History & Culture, Washington, DC); Moments in Time (2005; Banneker-Douglass Museum, Washington, DC); African American Expressions (1995; Japan Information & Cultural Center, Washington, DC); African American Abstraction in Printmaking (1991; Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, IL); Since the Harlem Renaissance: Fifty Years of Afro-American Art (1985: Bucknell Center Gallery, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA); and AfriCOBRA: The First Twenty Years (1990; Nexus Contemporary Art Center, Atlanta, GA).

His work has also been acquired by numerous institutional collections, including the Brooklyn Museum, the National Museum of African American History, National Endowment for the Arts, and the U.S. Department of State.


Nelson Stevens
Born in 1938 in Brooklyn, NY
Lives and works in Owings Mills, MD
AfriCOBRA Member: (founding member, 1968)

Nelson Stevens graduated from Ohio University (BFA, 1962) and Kent State University (MFA, 1969)

His work has been included in several group exhibitions, including Soul of a Nation; Art in the Age of Black Power (2017; Tate Modern, London, UK); Constructing Identity (2017; Portland Museum of Art, Portland, OR); AfriCOBRA: The First 29 Years Traveling Exhibition (1990; Lee Hall Gallery, Clemson University, Clemson, SC); AfriCOBRA and Group Fromaje, Esthetique Universelle, Universal Aesthetics (1989; Howard University, Washington, DC); AfriCOBRA IV (1977; Afro-American Historical and Cultural Museum, Philadelphia, PA); and his work has been shown at, the Studio Museum in Harlem (1973; New York, NY); the Center for African American Art (1972; Boston, MA); the Carnegie Mellon Institute (1972; Pittsburgh, PA); and the Museum of African & African-American Art (1980; Buffalo, NY).

His early and more recent works have been collected by the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Kent State University, Fisk University, Karamu House in Cleveland, the Chicago Institute of Art, and the Brooklyn Museum.


Renée Stout
Born in 1958 in Junction City, KS
Lives and works in Washington, DC
AfriCOBRA Member: 2017

Renée Stout graduated from Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburg, PA (BFA 1980).

Her solo exhibitions include Funk Dreamscapes from the Invisible Parallel Universe: Renée Stout (2018; John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI); Journal: Book One (2007; Hemphill Fine Arts, Washington, DC); Church of the Crossroads (2006; The Arts Center, St. Petersburg, FL); Fragments of a Secret Life (2005; Hemphill Fine Arts, Washington, DC); Readers, Advisors, and Storefront Churches (2005; The Ogden Museum, New Orleans, LA); Dueling Dualities (1997; Steinbaum Krauss Gallery, New York, NY); Astonishment and Power: Kongo Minkisi and the Art of Renee Stout (1993; The National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC); and Chapel Gallery (1987; Mount Vernon College, Washington, DC).

Stout’s work has been included in several group exhibitions, including SO ARTICULATE: Black Women Artists Reclaim the Narrative (2008; Arlington Arts Center, Arlington, VA); The Book as Art: Twenty Years of Artist’s Books from The National Museum of Women in the Arts (2006; The National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC); Paper Trail: African American Works on Paper (2006; High Museum, Atlanta, GA); Drawn to Representation (2005; Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC); The View From Here (2000; State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia); Postcards from Black America (1998; The De Beyerd Museum, Holland, Netherlands); Metaphysical Metaphors (1994; The High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA); and Site-seeing: Travel and Tourism in Contemporary Art (1991; The Whitney Museum of American Art Downtown at Federal Reserve Plaza, New York, NY).

AfriCOBRA

AfriCOBRA Artwork


September 15 – October 27th, 2018

Featured Artists (year of membership)
Akili Ron Anderson (1979), Kevin Cole (2003), Adger Cowans (1978), Michael D. Harris (1979), Napoleon Jones-Henderson (founding member, 1968), James Phillips (1973), Frank Smith (1973), Nelson Stevens (founding member, 1968), and Renee Stout (2017)

artwork | artists | artists’ talk | photos | catalogue | about AFRICOBRA






Artwork

Drawing from the tenets of the Black Power Movement, and the philosophical concepts and aesthetic principals of AfriCOBRA—works emerging from the collective captured the ethos of the black community. Through their imagery, rendered in a palette of “Kool-aid” colors, developed a black iconography rooted in African ancestry and black pride; and a lexicon, as in the term “mimesis at midpoint” to describe their artistic approach. These expressions, couched in idioms, such as, “the rich lustre of a just-washed ‘Fro” formed a vernacular that defines cultural nuances of the black experience. Myrtis Bedolla, Curator

Catalogue

AfriCOBRA Catalogue

AfriCOBRA: The Evolution of a Movement


Price: $29.99 USD +S&H – Limited-edition

Galerie Myrtis offers for sale the exhibition catalogue AfriCOBRA: The Evolution of a Movement, commemorating the 50th anniversary of AfriCOBRA (African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists) the coalition of black revolutionary artists whose aesthetic emerged from activism and a commitment to rail against racism through positive, powerful and uplifting imagery.

artwork | artists | about AFRICOBRA

Featured Artists (year of membership)
Akili Ron Anderson (1979), Kevin Cole (2003), Adger Cowans (1978), Michael D. Harris (1979), Napoleon Jones-Henderson (founding member, 1968), James Phillips (1973), Frank Smith (1973), Nelson Stevens (founding member, 1968), Renée Stout (2017)

Catalogue essayist: Melanee Harvey, Ph.D.
Curatorial Statement: Myrtis Bedolla

 

Paperback: 40 pages | 39 color and black and white illustrations
Year published: 2018
Language: English
ISBN: 978-0981960289
Dimensions: 8.5 x 11 inches