Blog.
What Is Creative Time?
A clear explanation of Creative Time and why its public art projects matter, especially for audiences interested in history, culture, and Black contemporary expression.
What Was the Bauhaus?
A brief introduction to the Bauhaus movement, its global significance, and how its ideas helped shape modern art and artists who influenced African-American creativity.
The Delta and the Cape: How Do They Connect?
To truly understand African-American creativity today, it helps to look at what is happening on the African continent itself. Zeitz MOCAA—the largest museum of contemporary African art—offers a powerful lens through which to see how global Black creativity continues to evolve. Its mission mirrors our own here in the Louisiana Delta, revealing deep connections across the African diaspora.
The Radical Vision of Black Conceptual Artists
Black conceptual artists of the 1960s and 70s redefined the possibilities of Conceptual Art, using language, performance, systems, and everyday materials to confront issues of identity, power, and institutional racism. Long overlooked by mainstream narratives, their work reveals a movement far more diverse, experimental, and politically charged than history has often acknowledged.
The Alchemy of Value: How Artists' Work Moves from the Margins to the Asset Class
How does a $10 thrift store find become a $110 million record-breaker? We decode the "alchemy" of the art market—from credibility signals to celebrity endorsements—and reveal how local museums act as the critical first step in turning marginalized voices into history’s most valuable assets.
Part II: The Contemporary Inheritance of Black Impressionism
In Part II of the Black Impressionism series, discover how contemporary artists such as Lynette Yiadom-Boakye and Paul Verdell transform Impressionist strategies into new expressions of interiority, identity, and emotional light. Their work extends a historic tradition into a dynamic, modern vocabulary.
Part I: The Origins of Black Impressionism
Discover the untold story of Black artists who embraced Impressionism, from Henry Ossawa Tanner in Paris to Allan Randall Freelon, Sr. in the U.S., and learn how their vision transformed light, color, and artistic freedom into a legacy that continues today.
What’s New? Everything.
The Studio Museum in Harlem, founded in 1968, reopens on November 15, 2025, in a new seven-story, purpose-built home with expanded galleries, classrooms, and public spaces.
A Timeline of Art in Monroe, Louisiana
From ancient earthworks to modern galleries, Monroe’s art story spans millennia. Discover how Indigenous creators, African American artisans, and contemporary artists shaped the Delta’s enduring creative legacy.
The Evolving Face of Jesus: From Symbol to Self
Conventional histories of Christian art often focus on European traditions, overlooking the rich visual cultures of Africa and the African diaspora. From early symbols like the Ichthys and Chi-Rho in Roman catacombs to Nubian frescoes, Ethiopian illuminated manuscripts, and the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela, African artists created their own sacred imagery. Enslaved Africans in the Americas encoded faith and hope into spirituals, while twentieth-century and contemporary African-American artists reclaimed Christ’s image in murals, prints, and statues. This ongoing dialogue across continents and centuries demonstrates that the face of Jesus is not fixed but reflects the cultures and experiences of those who depict him.
The Rebellion: From Classical Form to Abstract Expression
Every great art movement begins with rebellion. From the precision of Classical form to the emotional freedom of abstraction, artists have always pushed beyond the visible world. Discover how a local artist continues this “eternal rebellion” through vivid, soul-stirring paintings that connect global art history to Southern life.
From Thrift Store Find to Masterpiece: The Art Detective's Quest
Hidden in thrift stores, attics, and auction houses, lost masterpieces sometimes wait centuries to be rediscovered. But confirming their authenticity requires more than luck—it demands the trained eye of an art detective. From brushstroke analysis to chemical testing, these modern-day sleuths blend art, science, and history to reveal the truth behind a canvas.
What Does a Heist in Paris Mean for the Delta?
On October 19, 2025, a daring heist at the Louvre reminded the world how fragile cultural heritage can be. From priceless French jewels to the primary sources of the Delta’s African-American history, safeguarding our shared identity requires vigilance, community support, and active preservation.
Guardians of the Gallery: The Feline Night Watch
For centuries, museums have relied on an unexpected ally in their fight against decay and infestation: the cat. Before the advent of modern pest-control technologies, these animals played a vital role in preserving collections that might otherwise have been destroyed by rodents. Even today, their quiet presence in certain museums serves as a living reminder that preservation often depends on both human innovation and natural partnership.
Africans and the Making of Classical Greece
Ancient Greece didn’t rise in isolation. The great civilizations of Egypt and Nubia helped lay the groundwork for Greek art, mathematics, and philosophy. From the geometry of the Nile Valley to the African figures in Greek myth and sculpture, this shared history reveals a Mediterranean world more connected—and more African—than most realize.
Artist Spotlight: Bill Traylor
Born into slavery in Benton, Alabama, Bill Traylor began drawing in his mid-eighties, creating more than a thousand works that transformed American art. His bold, symbolic images—crafted from memory and imagination—speak to resilience, creativity, and the enduring human spirit.
Uncle Frederick
A newly acquired portrait of Frederick, an enslaved man, reveals the enduring exploitation of enslaved Mississippians. This post examines the history of Frederick and Delia, the portraits’ original propaganda function, and the urgent call for their dignified stewardship in a Black-led institution.
The Eternal Dialogue: Art's Quiet Pursuit of the Sacred
Art and spirituality have always walked hand in hand—from Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel to the coded symbols in African-American quilts. This post explores how artists across centuries, including Delta voices like Frank Kelly, Jr. and Daryl Triplett, use their work to reach for the sacred, the sublime, and the ineffable.
African Intermediaries in the Slave Trade: Kerry James Marshall’s New Histories
In The Histories, Kerry James Marshall paints not only the traumas of enslavement but also the difficult truths surrounding African intermediaries who helped fuel the transatlantic slave trade.
How to Be a Family Historian and Preserve Your Delta Legacy
Your family’s stories are a vital part of Northeast Louisiana’s history. Learn how to preserve photos, heirlooms, and memories to safeguard your Delta legacy for future generations.