<\/a>Browse and shop for fine art from our growing network of artists, collectors, estates, galleries — specializing in works by Black American artists with great values on premier art.<\/p><\/div>\n
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Alfred Conteh\u00a0<\/strong>produces paintings of everyday people. He finds and photographs them on the street and translates their images to the canvas, recreating astoundingly lifelike reproductions of the way the subjects stand, their facial features, and their street clothes. He places the everyday man and woman in spaces where they may never see themselves. But those of us looking at the paintings are forced to see them. Conteh adds dimension to the paintings by adding a layer of what resembles camouflage to the subjects sacrificing the real color of the subjects\u2019 skin and clothing, but really paying careful attention to their facial expression and hair texture. In addition to the portraits Conteh places his subject into scenes of their everyday surroundings in an attempt to add dimension to their narratives.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
Epaul Julien\u00a0<\/strong>repurposes paintings by European masters by photographing subjects that disrupt long-held beliefs about western culture. In Ode to Vermeer\u2019s Girl with a Pearl Earring, <\/em>he inserts an image of an Asian woman in the place of the original European sitter of the famous painting. In Olympia Met Kat, <\/em>heinserts a black woman in the reclined nude position with a white servant at her side whereas in the original the main subject is a white woman with her black servant. His \u201cPop Life Series\u201d features popular American icons including Elvis Presley, Jimmy Hendrix, Angela Davis and Madonna juxtaposed with images that allude to a more complex understanding of these personalities. His use of mixed media, acrylic, and resin create a distressed look, resembling posters exposed to the elements which may lend meaning to the artwork with implications of how these icons have weathered time.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
Ervin A. Johnson <\/strong>creates photo-based mixed media made to humanize the black body. In Johnson\u2019s #In Honor<\/em>series he creates portraits by photographing his subject in extreme close ups and then distorts the image by dividing the portraits into squares, creating a collage. The effect of the technique used, allows the artists to play with color and shading, which in effect changes the intensity of the portrait by highlighting parts of the subjects\u2019 face or covering up parts such as the eyes or the mouth. Overlaid on the photograph, Johnson uses paint to alter the photographs to intensify the features of the subject.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
Walter Lobyn\u00a0<\/strong>is a DJ, so he recognizes the sacred quality of vinyl records and the ritual of listening to an album. With the scarcity of vinyl records today, Lobyn memorializes them in his art. Using vinyl records to memorialize notable African American figures including Malcom X, Jimi Hendrix, Fela, and Prince, the vinyl is seamlessly incorporated into portraits with the essences of these icons embedded.\u00a0 The melding of the vinyl is masterfully rendered as black skin or hair in some of the pieces and in others the vinyl takes center stage as the subject matter of his artwork.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
Kevin Okeith\u00a0<\/strong>uses an impressionist style to paint images of the human figure and landscapes. Okeith employs techniques reminiscent of modern masters. His use of palette knife allows him to color the flesh of his subjects using minute gestures on the canvas to create rich pigmentation. Okeith\u2019s goal is to promote African beauty by celebrating strength, pride, and dignity. And the simply complex monochromatic landscapes he painted in pink, purple, and black disguise the subject as much as it does highlight it. While using one color, the landscape view Okeith wants the viewer to see is as clear as it is hidden.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n
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Shantay Robinson participated in\u00a0Burnaway<\/i>\u2019s\u00a0Art Writers Mentorship Program, Duke University\u2019s\u00a0The New New South\u00a0<\/i>Editorial Fellowship, and CUE Art Foundation\u2019s Art Critic Mentoring Program. She has written for\u00a0Burnaway, ArtsATL, ARTS.BLACK, AFROPUNK, Number, Inc.\u00a0<\/i>and\u00a0Washington City Paper<\/i>. While \u00a0receiving an MFA in Writing from Savannah College of Art and Design, she served as a docent at the High Museum of Art. She is currently working on a PhD in Writing and Rhetoric at George Mason University.<\/p>\n
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