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The Studio Museum in Harlem is an art museum that celebrates artists of African descent. [1] The museum is located at 144 West 125th Street between Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard and Lenox Avenue in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, United States.
Freestyle was a contemporary art exhibition at The Studio Museum in Harlem from April 28-June 24, 2001 curated by Thelma Golden with the support of curatorial assistant Christine Y. Kim. Golden curated the works of 28 emerging black artists for the exhibition, characterizing the work as 'Post-Black'.
R ujeko Hockley and her husband Hank Willis Thomas first met over email in 2005 when Hockley was a curatorial assistant at the Studio Museum in Harlem reaching out to Thomas about exhibit ...
That exhibition would subsequently inspire the title of the 2020 traveling exhibition Black Refractions: Highlights from The Studio Museum in Harlem.) [3] Lloyd's work in the exhibition proved controversial, departing as it did from a figurative aesthetic prevalent in African-American art at the time.
Studio Museum in Harlem: Harlem: Manhattan: Art: African and African-American: Art of African-Americans, specializing in 19th- and 20th-century work as well as exhibits of Caribbean and African art Sugar Hill Children's Museum of Art & Storytelling: Harlem: Manhattan: Children's Swiss Institute Contemporary Art New York: Lower Manhattan ...
Golden's first curatorial position was at the Studio Museum in Harlem in 1987. She was then a curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art from 1988 to 1998. She was the visual arts director at the Jamaica Arts Center in Queens [12] before she became director of the Whitney Museum's outpost in midtown Manhattan (since closed) in 1991. [12]
From 1977 to 1987, Schmidt Campbell served as executive director of the Studio Museum. During her tenure there, she steered the museum from a struggling organization located in a loft space above a liquor store to a 60,000 sq. ft. building and into one of the nation's premier black fine-arts museums with an annual $2 million budget.
Studio Museum in Harlem: Harlem: Manhattan: Art: Art of African-Americans, specializing in 19th- and 20th-century work as well as exhibits of Caribbean and African art The Africa Center: Museum Mile: Manhattan: Art: African art and culture, building new facility on Museum Mile: African Burial Ground National Monument: TriBeCa: Monument