Though they faced many obstacles historically—and still do today—Black gallerists in the United States have been hugely influential. Black dealers have launched the careers of artists who are now considered canonical and have worked with collectors intent on lifting up the voices of individuals from historically underrepresented communities. The work that Black dealers do is absolutely vital and must be recognized and supported by the art community at large.
Below, we take a closer look at art spaces across the United States founded or run (in part or entirely) by Black gallerists. We will be adding to this list continually and welcome your input. We’ll also be presenting a separate piece looking at spaces run by Black gallerists outside of the U.S. If you know of a Black-owned gallery we’re missing here, or if there is an international gallery we should be aware of, please let us know by sending an email to pitches@artsy.net with the subject line “Black-owned gallery.”
Arkansas
Hearne Fine Art
Little Rock, Arkansas
https://www.hearnefineart.com
@hearnefineart
Founded in 1988 by wife-and-husband duo Garbo and Archie Hearne, Hearne Fine Art set out to bring greater visibility to the work of African American artists in Arkansas. Their gallery in Little Rock’s historic Dunbar neighborhood has hosted countless exhibitions over the past 32 years, spanning from painting and printmaking to folk art and photography, and featuring works by artists such as Phoebe Beasley, Kevin Cole, Sylvester McKissick, and Latoya Hobbs. Discussing her sense of responsibility toward the artists the gallery shows, Garbo Hearne said in a 2019 profile, “They just need somewhere to sell their art. It’s a privilege to provide that.”
California
Paulson Fontaine Press
Berkeley, California
https://www.paulsonfontainepress.com
@paulsofontainepress
Paulson Fontaine Press is a Bay Area gallery and print shop specializing in intaglio prints (think etchings, engravings, et cetera). The press is spearheaded by master printer Pam Paulson and Rhea Fontaine, the latter of whom was recognized in 2016 as the first African American woman to publish fine art prints. In 1997, the press launched its first edition with four color etchings by Christopher Brown, and has since published hundreds of editions with dozens of artists including Tauba Auerbach, Ross Bleckner,
Band of Vices
Los Angeles, California
https://www.bandofvices.com
@bandofvices
Band of Vices was founded in 2015 by veteran screen actor and prolific collector Terrell Tilford after his first gallery, Tilford Art Group in New York City, closed its doors in 2010. Tilford, who has over 10 years of experience with collecting, has turned Band of Vices into a formidable player in Los Angeles’s gallery-heavy West Adams Art District. Recent exhibitions have showcased work by rising artists such as Grace Lynne Haynes, Yoyo Lander, and Shantell Martin.
Dominique Gallery
Los Angeles, California
https://www.dominiquegallery.com/
@dominique.gallery
Dominique Clayton opened her eponymous gallery in Los Angeles’s West Adams neighborhood in 2018 after years spent in the art world as a manager, curator, and writer, including in her current position at The Broad museum. The result of all this experience is Dominique Gallery, “a pop-up exhibition and online program which showcases and advises emerging artists of color and women,” according to Clayton’s LinkedIn. The gallery has shown work by Denae Howard, Mustafa Ali Clayton and
Atiya Jones, among others.
Nous Tous Community Gallery
Los Angeles, California
http://www.noustous.co
@noustousla
Nous Tous is part gallery, part store, and part community event space, all packed into a colorful storefront in Los Angeles’s Chinatown neighborhood. Launched by dancer and designer Maceo Paisley and designer Teresa Hu in 2016, in four years, the space has hosted exhibitions devoted to artists Chinaedu Nwadibia, Lorenzo Diggins, Jr., Panteha Abareshi, and many more, while fostering a diverse community of designers, photographers, painters, sculptors, and other creatives.
Betti Ono
Oakland, California
https://www.bettiono.com
@bettiono
Founded in 2010 by Oakland native Anyka Barber, Betti Ono is an arts and culture space in Downtown Oakland’s Black Arts Movement & Business District (BAMBD). In addition to selling local art and design objects, Betti Ono also offers year-round public programming for the community. In 2018, Betti Ono was named Best of the Bay for “Boutique Art Gallery” by Oakland Magazine, and was also listed as one of five reasons to visit Oakland by Essence twice.
Thelma Harris Art Gallery
Oakland, California
https://www.thelmaharrisartgallery.com
@thelmaharrisgallery
Thelma Harris Gallery specializes in both contemporary and historical Black artists, from modern names like Claude Clark and Jonathan Green to Harlem Renaissance acolytes
Palmer Hayden and Aaron Douglas. The gallery, started in 1987 by dealer Thelma Harris, accepts artists at any stage of their career, and features those working in painting, sculpture, and mixed-media art, among other media.
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
San Francisco, California; Brooklyn, New York
http://www.jenkinsjohnsongallery.com
@jenkinsjohnsongallery
Karen Jenkins-Johnson founded her namesake gallery in San Francisco in 1996, and over the years, she has turned it into a powerhouse within the Bay Area art community. The gallery shows artists like Black Arts Movement members Jae and Wadsworth Jarrell; Senegalese photographer Omar Victor Diop; collage and video artist Rashaad Newsome; and the Bahamaian painter Lavar Munroe. In 2017, Jenkins-Johnson expanded to Brooklyn, opening a project space in the Prospect Lefferts Gardens neighborhood. The programming there has been a mix of solo exhibitions and guest-curated group shows, featuring exhibitions organized by curators including Larry Ossei-Mensah, Jasmine Wahi, and Dexter Wimberly, and by artists such as Zanele Muholi and
Colorado
ILA Gallery
Denver, Colorado
https://www.ilaartgallery.com
@ila_gallery_
Founded in 2020 by local entrepreneur Fa’al Ali, Denver’s ILA Gallery is dedicated to street art and empowering community through culture. “Being a black minority in Denver, I just want to empower everybody that I can but keep where I come from in the forefront of my mind and my business,” Ali told Denver’s Westword. “Hopefully, we’ll be able to teach people to appreciate art and use art as an investment and as assets.”
Florida
N’Namdi Contemporary
Miami, Florida
http://www.nnamdicontemporary.com
@nnamdi_gallery
Jumaane N’Namdi grew up around art. In 1981, his father started G.R. N’Namdi Gallery in Detroit, and Jumaane joined him at the helm of the gallery’s Chicago output when he graduated from Morehouse College in 1997. In 2012, after helping to expand G.R. N’Namdi Gallery to New York, Jumaane started N’Namdi Contemporary in Miami to bring his 15 years of experience to a new city. N’Namdi Contemporary represents blue-chip African American artists such as Ed Clark, Frank Bowling, Al Loving, and
Georgia
Arnika Dawkins
Atlanta, Georgia
https://www.adawkinsgallery.com
@arnikadawkins
When marketing executive–turned–gallerist Arnika Dawkins opened the doors of her eponymous gallery in 2011, she did so with a commitment to representing Black artists. “It’s a challenge for any talented artist to have their work seen,” she told Atlanta magazine, “but it’s even more so for people of color.” From well-known photographers like Gordon Parks to French-Senagalese portrait photographer Delphine Diallo, Dawkins represents artists with a wide range of experience and a variety of styles. Through July 15th, Dawkins is running a COVID-19 relief effort—proceeds from a print sale will be donated through Feeding America, a nationwide network serving communities in need.
September Gray Fine Art
Atlanta, Georgia
https://www.septembergrayart.com
@septembergrayart
September Gray Gallery represents artists of the African diaspora at all stages of their careers. Before her career as a gallerist, founding director September Gray worked in the performing arts, as well as at an arts consultancy firm. Most recently, the gallery hosted the exhibition “The Four Horsemen,” focusing on four Black masters of abstraction: Melvin Edwards, Sam Gilliam, Richard Hunt, and William T. Williams.
ZuCot Gallery
Atlanta, Georgia
https://www.zucotgallery.com
@zucotgallery
ZuCot Gallery in historic Castleberry Hill, Atlanta, is the largest Black-owned gallery in the American Southeast. Founder Troy Taylor named the gallery after his grandmother, Frances Ann Taylor, whose fierce reputation as one of the first female grocers in the local market earned her comparisons to a tough “zoo cat”—or ZuCot. Taylor says that “the name of the gallery is a tribute to the pioneers and giants whose shoulders we stand on,” and ZuCot’s exhibitions reflect that philosophy. Recent exhibitions include “HER,” a survey of emerging Black female artists such as Georgette Baker and
LaToya Hobbs, as well as “4HUNDRED,” a group show focused on tracing the legacy of the Black experience in America.
Sabree’s Gallery of the Arts
Savannah, Georgia
http://www.sabreesgallery.com
@sabreesgallery
Patricia Elaine Sabree started her eponymous Savannah gallery as an outlet and archive for artwork related to the Gullah culture native to the coastal low country in states like Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas. Sabree is originally from a town in that region called Lake City, which is in South Carolina. She uses her roots in the Gullah experience to create the bright, blocky, intensely evocative paintings that she also sells through her gallery.
Illinois
Mariane Ibrahim Gallery
Chicago, Illinois
https://www.marianeibrahim.com
@marianeibrahimgallery
Since opening her first gallery (then called M.I.A., an acronym for “Missing in Art”) in Seattle in 2012, Mariane Ibrahim has championed Black artists and brought a contemporary perspective to African art. Of starting M.I.A, she told Artsy Editorial, “The opening really came from an instinct of almost survival. I said, ‘If I don’t open that space and put in artists I’m craving, either it’s not going to happen, or somebody is going to do it for me.’” Ibrahim has since moved her gallery to Chicago and built a talented and successful roster of artists, from on-the-rise Ghanaian painter Amoako Boafo to Lina Iris Viktor and Ayana V. Jackson.
Anthony Gallery
Chicago, Illinois
https://www.anthony.gallery
@galleryanthony
Isimeme “Easy” Otabor is a fixture in Chicago’s creative community. He’s worked at various clothing stores including RSVP Gallery and Saint Alfred, and created his own label, Infinite Archives. Otabor added “gallerist” to his résumé last December when he opened Anthony Gallery, which focuses on contemporary art and welcomes collaborations and aesthetic partnerships. In addition to presenting group shows featuring the work of visual artists such as Nina Chanel Abney and Sterling Ruby, the gallery has also presented hip hop–focused photography and a collaboration with Jordan Brand in anticipation of the new Retro Air Jordan XI ‘Bred.’
Gallery Guichard
Chicago, Illinois
https://www.galleryguichard.com
Located in Chicago’s Bronzeville Artist Lofts, Gallery Guichard was opened in 2005 by owners Andre Guichard, Frances Guichard, and Stephen Mitchell. The gallery’s mission is to spotlight underrepresented artists of the African diaspora. In addition to a wide range of exhibitions, the gallery also hosts artist talks and events, and offers art services to the community including framing, crating, shipping, and moving.
Kentucky
E&S Gallery
Louisville, Kentucky
https://www.eandsgallery.com
@eandsgallery
At E&S Gallery in Louisville, Kentucky, Walter and Cathy Shannon present contemporary art alongside that of older generations. The Shannons sell work by artists including 20th-century luminary Elizabeth Catlett, self-taught sculptor Kimmy Cantrell, and the wildly influential Jacob Lawrence. Walter Shannon has been selling art since the 1970s and has built up a national collector base from Louisville: According to a recent profile, both Sinbad and Muhammad Ali have been clients.
Louisiana
Stella Jones Gallery
New Orleans, Louisiana
http://www.stellajonesgallery.com
@stellajonesgallery
Located in downtown New Orleans, Stella Jones Gallery was started by Dr. Stella Jones and her husband Harry in 1996. The gallery focuses on African American art, as well as contemporary African and Caribbean art. Past exhibitions have centered on printmaker and painter Samella Lewis and artist Jammie Holmes—who recently garnered attention for his project commemorating George Floyd—and the gallery has also mounted a retrospective on the trailblazing Chicago Black Arts Movement commune AfriCOBRA.
Terrance Osborne Gallery
New Orleans, Louisiana
@terranceosbornegallery
New Orleans–based artist Terrance Osborne sells his vividly colored paintings through his eponymous gallery, located on Magazine Street near the city’s 11th Ward neighborhood. Osborne has been an active member of the New Orleans art scene since the 1990s, when he began to paint under the tutelage of Richard Thomas, and has continued up through the modern day with designs for the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and collaborations with Nike. His paintings render his home city and its inhabitants in fantastically dreamy hues.
Maryland
Galerie Myrtis
Baltimore, Maryland
http://www.galeriemyrtis.net
@Galeriemyrtis
Galerie Myrtis is built on more than 30 years of art-world experience from founder Myrtis Bedolla. In addition to her roles as art advisor and founding director of the gallery, Bedolla has also curated shows at the National Museum of Niger, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American Art in Detroit, and the Katzen Arts Center in Washington, D.C. Galerie Myrtis hosts around six exhibitions a year, and past shows have included artists such as Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Delilah Pierce, Amy Sherald, and Charles White. The gallery also hosts a recurring live talk series, “Tea with Myrtis,” in which artists and art professionals discuss trends in the art world.
The Gallery About Nothing
Baltimore, Maryland
@thegalleryaboutnothing
The Gallery About Nothing—which shares its space with the Mini Hip Hop Museum—can be found on East Baltimore Street in the Jonestown neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland. Founded by Mark Shawn Clarke Jr. in 2018, in addition to showing the work of local artists, the space also hosts hip hop–themed game nights as well as sip and paint (and puff and paint) nights for the community. “We’re really giving our all to this art hustle,” Maya Camille, the brains behind the Mini Hip Hop Museum, told CBS Baltimore. “This is the perfect place to learn, grow yourself and propel you forward.”
Waller Gallery
Baltimore, Maryland
https://www.wallergallery.com
@wallergallery
Established in Baltimore’s Barclay neighborhood in 2017 by curator and scholar Joy Davis, Waller Gallery is a multidisciplinary art space with a focus on art created by people of color. “I think it’s important to have black- and brown-owned galleries and cultural spaces, and to continue that legacy,” Davis told the Baltimore Fishbowl in 2018. “It’s not just about black- and brown-owned galleries, it’s about what kind of art they’re showing.” Davis, who grew up just outside of the city, lives above the gallery.
New York
Dorsey’s Art Gallery
Brooklyn, New York
https://www.dorseyartgallery.com
Located in Brooklyn, Dorsey’s Art Gallery is the oldest, continuously run, Black-owned and -operated art gallery in New York City. Founded by Lawrence Peter Dorsey in 1970, the then–gallery/frame shop became a haven for Black artists and collectors. Regulars included Ernest Crichlow, Tom Feelings, Elizabeth Catlett, Arthur Coppedge, Bob Blackborn, Otto Neals, James Denmark, Jacob Lawrence, Ann Tanksley, Christopher Gonzales, Emmett Wigglesworth, and James Brown, among many others. Though Dorsey died in 2007, the gallery has been passed down to his daughter Laurette and members of the community.
Ground Floor Gallery
Brooklyn, New York
https://www.groundfloorbk.com
@groundfloorbk
Founded in 2013 by Krista Scenna and Jill Benson in Brooklyn’s Park Slope neighborhood, Ground Floor Gallery shows local artists and nurtures nascent art collectors. In their seven years running the space, Scenna and Benson have tried to program exhibitions of affordable works—from summer shows of mail art to presentations devoted to prints or artist-designed gifts—as well as ambitious thematic solo and group shows that have included the works of Ronald Hall, Tammy Nguyen, and Karen Mainenti.
Housing
Brooklyn, New York
https://housing-art.info/
@housingny
In 2016, KJ Freeman opened Housing in Bed-Stuy as an antidote to the traditional white cube. “The white cube can determine a representation of white supremacy,” Freeman once told Spike. “A twenty-thousand-dollar white cube stands stagnant in a buzzing retail district to appease, and to conform to the desires of the cultured and affluent of the world.” In 2017, the Bed-Stuy space closed, and for a couple of years the gallery found temporary locales for one-off shows, which championed Black artists and artists of color. Housing recently signed a three-year lease in the Lower East Side, opening their new space earlier this month. Their inaugural show, “Vigil for Black Death,” features video work by artists such as Keijaun Thomas and Sofia Moreno, shown on a screen that can be seen through the gallery’s window. Visitors are invited to bring flowers, candles, and other expressions of their grief to the site.
Medium Tings
Brooklyn, New York
https://www.mediumtingsbk.com
@mediumtings
Driven by a desire to explore “understated dialogues around black art,” in 2017, cultural producer and editor Stephanie Baptist turned her Brooklyn apartment into a gallery and project space dedicated to emerging contemporary artists. Her program highlights underrepresented young Black artists including Ayana Evans, Arielle Bobb-Willis,
Milo Matthieu, Temitayo Ogunbiyi, and Marcus Leslie Singleton.
Richard Beavers Gallery
Brooklyn, New York
@richardbeaversgallery
In a 2016 interview, gallerist Richard Beavers recalled how his encounter with artist Alonzo Adams’s painting The Journeyman changed the course of his life. “This image of a black man shirtless and barefoot, with a pair of blue jeans and knapsack over his shoulder walking into a tunnel of darkness, gave me goosebumps. The man in the painting was me,” Beavers said. “It was a confirmation that I wasn’t alone in the world and that there was someone else who was starting over again not certain of what the future may hold.” Beavers founded his gallery in 2007 in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, where he shows works by artists including the storied Black photographer Jamel Shabazz and the emerging painter Genesis Tramaine.
sk.Artspace
Brooklyn, New York
https://www.skartspace.com
@sk.artspace
Brooklyn’s sk.ArtSpace was founded by Symone Wong, Jarryn Mercer, and Melissa Sutherland in June 2018 with the goal of creating a safe space and platform for community members to show their work and for emerging artists to expand their audience. “As a creative, sharing yourself and your work is very challenging. A lot of creatives do not know where to begin, what kind of dialogues to have, or even how to get their work into shows,” the co-founders told Refinery29. “Typically, the local creatives in our community have access to exhibits that are held at local bars and establishments that took away from the experience of artists.” Artists can apply to show at sk.ArtSpace here.
Welancora
Brooklyn, New York
https://www.welancoragallery.com/
@welancora
Located in a 19th-century townhouse in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Welancora Gallery was initially founded by art dealer, curator, and Brooklyn native Ivy N. Jones in 2002, then re-launched in 2014. Welancora is also a space for guest curators of color to arrange exhibitions. The gallery’s most recent show featured the work of seven Black artists (Zalika Azim, Elliot Jerome Brown Jr., Colette Veasey-Cullors, Melvin Harper, Daonne Huff, Anders Jones, and Deborah Willis) and was co-curated by the artist Damien Davis.
Black Gotham
New York, New York
http://www.blackgotham.com
@blackgotham
Black Gotham originated when its founder, Kamau Ware, was working at New York’s Tenement Museum and giving walking tours on the history of New York City’s immigrants of the 19th and early 20th centuries. After one tour, a young Black girl asked Ware, “Where were the Black people?” That question led him to establish Black Gotham’s walking tours, which focuses on the historic impact of the African diaspora. Black Gotham also creates graphic novels, and has a gallery and event space in Lower Manhattan where artworks from these projects can viewed in person.
Cindy Rucker Gallery
New York, New York
https://www.cindyruckergallery.com
@ruckergallery
Originally founded in 2007 as Number 35 Gallery, Cindy Rucker Gallery in New York’s Lower East Side neighborhood has a roster of international artists who work across disciplines. Among its artists are Japanese sculptor Hirosuke Yabe, who has garnered great attention for his carved wooden sculptures; the Spanish mixed-media artist
Javier Arce; and American painter Charles Dunn. Shows at Cindy Rucker have been reviewed in countless publica
Essie Green Galleries
New York, New York
https://www.essiegreengalleries.com
@essie.green.gall
Originally located in Park Slope, Essie Green Galleries opened its first exhibition on December 15, 1979. Its roster of 19th- and 20th-century Black masters includes artists like Romare Bearden, Charles Alston, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Henry Ossawa Tanner,Charles Ethan Porter, and Sam Gilliam. Since moving to Harlem’s Sugar Hill neighborhood in 1989, the gallery has become a vital centerpiece of the community’s Black cultural renaissance.
Gallery Kendra Jayne Patrick
New York, New York
https://www.gallerykendrajaynepatrick.com
@gallerykendrajaynepatrick
Kendra Jayne Patrick has run her eponymous, itinerant gallery program (previously known as Harrison) since 2018, primarily mounting shows at art spaces and temporary locations in New York. Patrick has shown a range of young, international artists, including Qualeasha Wood, Kenya (Robinson), Lap-See Lam, Joshua Citarella, and
Ivan Argote. The gallery recently participated in NADA’s online sales platform FAIR.
Heath Gallery
New York, New York
https://www.heathgallerynewyork.com
New York’s Heath Gallery was founded in 2002 by husband-and-wife artists Thomas Edwin Heath and Saundra Alexis Heath. Operating out of a landmark townhouse (built in 1886) on Central Harlem’s 120th Street, the gallery opened as a space to give artists opportunities to show their work, with priority given to those based in the neighborhood. The gallery also hosts “Hang Nights,” where artists are invited to show up with their work and hang it Salon style throughout the evening.
June Kelly Gallery
New York, New York
https://www.junekellygallery.com
June Kelly founded her eponymous gallery in SoHo in 1987, after managing
Romare Bearden’s career for 13 years. Kelly’s diverse roster includes influential Black artists such as Elizabeth Catlett, Norman W. Lewis, Moe Brooker, and Debra Priestly. Alongside iconic dealer Linda Goode Bryant, Kelly helped build a New York gallery scene in the ’80s that was more accommodating to Black artists. “We’re like the guide that helps [the artist] through it,” Kelly has said of her role as a gallery director. “This is a person who goes in that studio alone, creates alone, there’s no one to tell him or her what to do—that all comes from within. So the most important thing you can do…is to make sure that that person has somebody to say ‘Fantastic, I love it, keep doing it,’ and that’s the key.”
Long Gallery
New York, New York
http://www.long.gallery
@longgallery
Harlem-based Long Gallery has honed an ethos inspired by the art of its local community—from the photography of the Harlem Renaissance to the Studio Museum in Harlem. Owner Lewis Long founded the gallery in 2014 with a mission to show both emerging and established artists of the African diaspora, while also giving a spotlight to underrepresented artists. In recent years, the gallery has shown esteemed and rising artists, such as Kennedy Yanko, Bisa Butler, Arcmanoro Niles, and Derek Fordjour.
Peg Alston Fine Arts
New York, New York
http://www.pegalstonfinearts.com
@pegalston
Founded by New York–based art dealer Peg Alston nearly 40 years ago, Peg Alston Fine Arts is a gallery on Central Park West between 100th and 101st Streets that specializes in artworks by African American artists as well as artists of all African descent. Alston’s gallery has its own exclusive roster of artists including Romare Bearden, Anthony Barboza, and Antonio Carreno. It also sells works by artists it doesn’t represent, including Sam Gilliam, Betye Saar, Howardena Pindell, Frank Bowling, and Faith Ringgold.
Skoto Gallery
New York, New York
https://www.skotogallery.com
@skoto_gallery
Established in 1992, Skoto Gallery was among the first spaces to specialize in representing contemporary African artists in New York City. Since then, the gallery has expanded its mission to become a nexus for artists of any ethnic or cultural persuasion, allowing African art to be in conversation with the global cultural dialogue. It currently represents artists including Uche Okeke, Ifeoma Anyaeji, Ibrahim El Salahi, and Osaretin Ighile.
The Compound Gallery
The Bronx, New York
https://www.thecmpdgallery.com
@compoundgallery_
Since the early 2000s, Set Free Richardson has run The Compound in the South Bronx, the creative agency where he works on campaigns for major brands and invites friends and creatives to meet and exchange ideas. In 2018, Richardson opened The Compound Gallery nearby—a natural extension of the original business—together with Yasiin Bey (a.k.a. Mos Def). The gallery shows artists and art forms that are underrepresented and often excluded from the gallery system, from rising street artists to legendary photographers who’ve captured the hip-hop community.
Mackey Twins Art Gallery
Mount Vernon, New York
https://www.mackeytwinsartgallery.com
@mackeytwinsart
Karen and Sharon Mackey founded the Mackey Twins Art Gallery in 2004 in order to address the lack of representation and support for artists of color in the art industry. The sisters—twins, as the gallery name indicates—are both former high school teachers who purchased their first work, a James Denmark print, over 40 years ago by pooling their salaries. The gallery now represents Denmark, along with other iconic Black artists such as Elizabeth Catlett and Jacob Lawrence. The Mackey sisters are also actively involved with the City College of New York: Sharon is the executive director of continuing and professional studies, while Karen is the vice president of government, community, and cultural affairs.
Ohio
Framed Gallery
Cleveland, Ohio
https://www.framedgallery.net/
@framedgallery_
Framed Gallery, situated in Cleveland’s Waterloo arts district, focuses on emerging, mid-career, and established Black artists. Founder Stacey Bartels worked as an arts educator for more than 20 years before opening the gallery in 2018. She has exhibited artists including Antwoine Washington, Charly Palmer, Evita Tezeno, and Preston Sampson, among many others.
Nevada
Left of Center Art Gallery
Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.leftofcenterart.org
@leftofcenter
Left of Center Art Gallery is an artist-supported and -administered nonprofit art space in Las Vegas, Nevada, which first opened in 1987 and is run by longtime community organizer Vicki Richardson. In addition to being an exhibition space, Left of Center also provides mentoring, teaching, and studio space for artists, and advocates for the arts in public education by working directly with students and art educators throughout their community.
North Carolina
BlkMrkt
Charlotte, North Carolina
https://www.blkmrktclt.com
@blkmrktclt
BlkMrkt is a gallery, studio, and event space in Charlotte, North Carolina. Its team of four creatives—Sir Will, Carey J. King, Dammit Wesley, and Carla Lopez—operates the space, offering local photographers and artists of color a safe, creative atmosphere to work in. BlkMrkt also hosts a variety of exhibitions and workshops for local artists and the community, in addition to operating as a general-use event space.
Dupp & Swat
Charlotte, North Carolina
http://www.duppandswat.com
@duppandswat
Dupp & Swat—the brainchild of siblings Dion (“Dupp”) and Davita (“Swat”) Galloway—is a multifunctional community space that sells work by local artists and collaborates with nonprofits in addition to offering community events and programming. “I see where the city uses artists to attract people to the city, yet they close our galleries,” Davita told the Charlotte Observer. “You need to support the culture, you need to support art, you need to support creative expression in Charlotte before another one bites the dust.”
Oklahoma
Black Wall Street Gallery
Tulsa, Oklahoma
https://www.bwsgallery.com
@bws.gallery
Tulsa, Oklahoma’s Greenwood district, historically known as Black Wall Street, is a thriving community with a history of Black entreupenurship that dates back over 100 years. In 1921, its prosperity also made it the target of one of the worst instances of racial violence in American history. Today, Black Wall Street Gallery is a staple of the neighborhood. Founded in 2018 by activist, educator, philosopher, and Tulsa native Dr. Ricco Wright—who is currently running for mayor of the city—Black Wall Street Gallery aims to bring the community together through arts, theater, and education.
Pennsylvania
Moody Jones Gallery
Glenside, Pennsylvania
@moodyjonesgallery
Opened by husband-and-wife duo Adrian J. Moody and Robyn R. Jones in 2016, Moody Jones Gallery focuses on emerging and established artists from the African diaspora. The gallery was born out of the couple’s desire to show and sell works from their personal collection. “As collectors for many years, we came to know many artists, and once we opened, we renewed those relationships,” they told Artsy Editorial. The gallery is also a space for art-related lectures and readings.
The Spite Haus
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
https://www.thespitehaus.com
@thespitehauz
After over a decade of working in New York City’s museums and galleries, husband-and-wife team Curtis and Erin-Batson Edwards moved to Philadelphia, where they opened The Spite Haus in 2019. The Spite Haus is a home for vintage and contemporary design objects and homewares, as well as an exhibition space for emerging artists. Its online shop is home to both design and fine art, with prints starting at price points as accessible as $40.
Rush Arts Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
https://www.rushphilanthropic.org
@rushartsphilly
Rush Arts Philadelphia opened in the city’s Logan neighborhood in 2016 with an exhibition that responded directly to recent and ongoing protest movements, including Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter. That activist spirit has remained at the core of the space’s programs. In the last two years, its exhibitions have ranged in theme from portraits of victims of gun violence, to “Giving Up The Ghost: Artifacts/A Study of Power and Solidarity Against White Violence in Modernity” (a show curated by Niama Safia Sandy), to street photography by Jay Potter, and, just before the pandemic hit, to an exhibition of large-scale drawings made by Imo Nse Imeh in response to a racist children’s book and nursery rhyme from the early 20th century.
South Carolina
Gallery Chuma
Charleston, South Carolina
http://www.gallerychuma.com
Like Sabree’s Gallery of the Arts in Savannah, Georgia, Gallery Chuma celebrates the creativity of the Gullah people—the descendants of enslaved Africans who settled off the south Atlantic coast in isolated communities during the 19th century. Run by Chuma Nwokike out of Charleston, South Carolina, Gallery Chuma represents artists including
James Denmark, Jonathan Green, John W. Jones, Carol A. Simmons, and Irene Tison. Nwokike also sells hats made by his sister, Grace Mark, which line the gallery walls.
Neema Gallery
Charleston, South Carolina
http://www.neemagallery.com
@neemagallery
Owned by Meisha Johnson, Neema Gallery features a roster composed entirely of top African American artists from the South, including James Denmark, Tyrone Geter, Otto Neals, potters Winton and Rosa Eugene, and civil rights photographer Cecil Williams. Johnson is an artist herself. “My goal, and I want to make this clear—I don’t want to be the only African American–owned gallery in town,” she said in a 2019 interview. “My goal is to help increase diversity. And it’s my goal that even maybe some of these artists, once they do well, they may open a gallery.” Around the corner, Johnson recently opened a second space, Gallery Elevate, featuring African American artists from across the U.S. “It’s a place where we’ll nurture beginning collectors,” Johnson said.
Virginia
The Well Art Gallery
Richmond, Virginia
https://www.thewellartgallery.com
@thewellartgallery
The Well Art Gallery is an exhibition space located in the Blackwell neighborhood of Richmond, Virginia, with an emphasis on elevating and supporting Black artists. The gallery was founded in 2018 by Richmond natives James Harris and Ajay Brewer—Brewer also owns the coffee shop Brewer’s Café less than two blocks from the gallery—and is named after a longtime nickname for the neighborhood. Artists are currently welcome to submit their work on the gallery’s website.
Washington, D.C.
Art of Noize
Washington, D.C.
https://www.artofnoizedmv.com
@artofnoizedmv
Opened in 2017 in Washington, D.C.’s Petworth neighborhood, Art of Noize is a multi-use arts space where artists can showcase work of all mediums. Far from a traditional gallery model, Art of Noize offers its space to be rented out for exhibitions, performances, screenings, readings, and more. The space is an intimate setting that Art of Noize refers to as its “living room.”
Homme DC
Washington, D.C.
https://www.hommellc.com
@homme_dc
Founded in 2014 by Washington, D.C., native Amir Browder, Homme DC is located in the capital’s O Street Studios, a creative hub of galleries, manufacturing, art studios, and retail spaces. Homme DC originally began as a pop-up shop, displaying the work of local artists and designers, but it soon took on a life of its own. “It became a cult-like following of these up-and-coming artists coming into the space. Then it started evolving from that to artists of all disciplines. I started getting really booked, and the space exploded,” Browder told Washingtonian. In addition to art, Homme DC continues to sell men’s apparel, accessories, and grooming products.
Mehari Sequar Gallery
Washington, D.C.
https://www.meharisequargallery.com
@meharisequargallery
Before founding Mehari Sequar Gallery in 2019, Mehari Sequar—a native Eritrean who was raised in London—worked in Washington, D.C., as a real estate developer. Today, his gallery hosts exhibitions by a wide range of established, emerging, and international artists. The gallery’s most recent show was a collection of paintings by D.C. native
Chris Pyrate. The space also hosts a film series, along with talks with local artists and creators.
11:Eleven Gallery
Washington, D.C.
https://www.11elevengallery.com
@11eleven_gallery
11:Eleven Gallery opened in the fall of 2019, bringing British flavor to D.C.’s gallery scene. Before founding the gallery, London-born Nicola Charles worked at galleries, auction houses, and art festivals in the U.K. Her travels brought her to Washington, D.C., where she opened 11:Eleven Gallery to exhibit British contemporary and street art. Charles shows artists including Banksy, Marly McFly, Tracey Emin, and Zabou at her Truxton Circle space.
Artsy Editorial