Exhibition Overview

Barbara Jones-Hogu, Unite (First State), 1969. Screenprint.
Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power shines a bright light on the vital contribution o🙈f Black artists made over two decades, beginning in 1963 at the height of t♑he civil rights movement. The exhibition examines the influences, from the civil rights and Black Power movements to Minimalism and developments in abstraction, on artists such as Romare Bearden, Barkley Hendricks, Noah Purifoy, Martin Puryear, Faith Ringgold, Betye Saar, Alma Thomas, Charles White, and William T. Williams. Los Angeles-based artists appear throughout Soul of a Nation, and more deeply in three specific galleries, foregrounding the significant role of Los Angeles in the art and history of the civil rights movement and the subsequent activist era, and the critical influence and sustained originality of the city’s artists, many of whom have lacked wider recognition.
Featuring the work of more than 60 influential artists and including vibrant paintings, powerful sculptures, stree🍸t photography, murals, and more, this lan📖dmark exhibition is a rare opportunity to see era-defining artworks that changed the face of art in America.
168开奖官方开奖网站查询:(© Barbara Jones-Hogu.)
Read Less