{"id":3372,"date":"2018-06-14T18:06:06","date_gmt":"2018-06-14T18:06:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=3372"},"modified":"2019-02-07T20:36:01","modified_gmt":"2019-02-07T20:36:01","slug":"10-emerging-black-female-artists-to-collect","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=3372","title":{"rendered":"10 Emerging Black Female Artists to Collect"},"content":{"rendered":"
by\u00a0Shantay Robinson<\/p>\n
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Female artists, regardless of race, are typically overlooked in Western art where the white male dominates. But it must be known that black female artists have been making a valuable imprint on the art world for generations. Black women artists participate in every medium and offer alternatives to the narratives created by the dominant culture. Offering narratives that include black pride during the Harlem Renaissance or black power during the Black Power Movement, black women artists asserted themselves in spaces where they may have been marginalized, but where their voices could not be ignored.<\/p>\n
Today black female artists are being centralized as women\u2019s movements force the hegemony of the art world to be more inclusive. Shows like We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women 1965-85\u00a0<\/em>and Magnetic Fields: Expanding American Abstraction 1960s to Today <\/em>prove that Black women have been putting in the work for generations. And while they are only recently being celebrated, their fortitude has influenced a new generation of Black women artists who continue to work in the legacy of artists who have used the canvas to convey alternative accounts of black life.<\/p>\n These contemporary artists who are represented by Black-owned art galleries across the country have continued the work of their predecessors by offering narratives that speak to the black experience, but especially the black female experience.<\/p>\n Lavett Ballard<\/a><\/span>\u00a0<\/strong>is a visual storyteller. In her latest work she places prints on old fences. The prints are manipulated to create narratives that speak to the black female experience. And the fences are symbolic. They represent the societal barriers that keep people out. While actual fences physically keep people from existing in a space, Ballard recognizes the societal barriers that have kept women and nonwhites from acceptance in our society, as well.<\/strong><\/p>\n April Bey\u00a0<\/strong>uses photographic images of some of contemporary culture\u2019s most outspoken feminists in addition to mixed media to create art that speak of the narratives black women are currently creating about their identity. Using images of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Solange, Issa Rae, and Michaela Cole, her Made in Space<\/em>series employs text to relay feminist themes associated with the aforementioned personalities\u2019 overall ideology. She uses paint and photography but also sews fabric onto the canvas to add dimension to the flat surfaces. Bey creates commentary on contemporary black female rhetoric by also incorporating themes about the natural hair movement and the language that surrounds that discussion.<\/strong><\/p>\n