art.wikisort.org - Artist This list of African-American visual artists is a list that includes dates of birth and death of historically recognized African-American fine artists known for the creation of artworks that are primarily visual in nature, including traditional media such as painting, sculpture, photography, and printmaking, as well as more recent genres, including installation art, performance art, body art, conceptual art, video art, and digital art. The entries are in alphabetical order by surname.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
Robert Scott Duncanson, Landscape with Rainbow c. 1859 , Hudson River School , Smithsonian American Art Museum , Washington, DC.
Artists
Scipio Moorhead , Portrait of poet Phillis Wheatley , 1773, in the frontispiece to her book Poems on Various Subjects
Edward Mitchell Bannister , Driving Home the Cows 1881
Harriet Powers , Bible quilt , mixed media, 1886
Henry Ossawa Tanner , Gateway, Tangier , 1912, oil on canvas, 18 7/16" × 15 5/16", St. Louis Art Museum
Charles Alston , Again The Springboard Of Civilization , 1943 (WWII African American soldier)
Larry D. Alexander ,Greenville Courthouse , 1998
A–B
Panteha Abareshi (born 1999), multidisciplinary artist
Nina Chanel Abney (born 1982), painter
Blanch Ackers (1914–2003), painter
Terry Adkins (1953–2014), artist[1]
Mequitta Ahuja (born 1976), painter, installation artist
Larry D. Alexander (born 1953), painter
Laylah Ali (born 1968), painter
Jules T. Allen (born 1947), photographer
Tina Allen (1949–2008), sculptor
Steve R. Allen (born 1954), painter
Charles Alston (1907–1977), painter[2] [1]
Amalia Amaki (born 1959), artist
Emma Amos (1938–2020), painter[2]
Benny Andrews (1930–2006), painter[2] [1]
Edgar Arceneaux (born 1972), drawing artist
Nellie Ashford (born c. 1943), folk artist[3]
James Atkins (b. 1941), painter
Roland Ayers (1932–2014), printmaker
Radcliffe Bailey (born 1968) collage, sculpture[4] [5]
Kyle Baker (born 1965), cartoonist
Matt Baker (1921–1959), comic book artist
James Presley Ball (1825–1904), photographer
Alvin Baltrop (1948–2004), photographer
Henry Bannarn (1910–1965), painter[1]
Edward Mitchell Bannister (1828–1901), painter[2] [1]
Ernie Barnes (1938–2009), neo-Mannerist artist[2]
Richmond Barthé (1901–1989), sculptor[2] [1]
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988), painter[2]
C. M. Battey (1873–1927), photographer
Romare Bearden (1911–1988), painter[2] [1]
Arthello Beck (1941–2004), painter
Arthur P. Bedou (1882–1966), photographer
Darrin Bell (born 1975), cartoonist
Mary A. Bell (1873–1941)
Dawoud Bey (born 1953), photographer[2]
Sharif Bey (born 1974), ceramist
John T. Biggers (1924–2001), muralist[2] [1]
Sanford Biggers (born 1970), interdisciplinary
Gene Bilbrew (1923–1974), cartoonist and fetish artist
Camille Billops (1933–2019), filmmaker, sculptor, painter, printmaker
McArthur Binion (born 1946), painter
Robert Blackburn (1920–2003) master printmaker, lithographer, and educator.[6]
Thomas Blackshear (born 1955)
Betty Blayton (1937–2016), painter, printmaker[1]
Chakaia Booker (born 1953), sculptor[2]
Edythe Boone (born 1938), muralist
Charles Boyce (born 1949), cartoonist
Tina Williams Brewer , fiber artist[7]
Michael Bramwell (born 1953), conceptual artist
James Brantley (b. 1945), painter
Mark Bradford (born 1961)
Elenora "Rukiya" Brown, doll creator
Elmer Brown (1909–1971)
Frank J. Brown (1956–2020), sculptor
Frederick J. Brown (1945–2012), painter[2]
Larry Poncho Brown (born 1962)
Manuelita Brown , sculptor
Robert Brown (c. 1936 – 2007), cartoonist
Beverly Buchanan (1940–2015), painter, sculptor[1]
Selma Burke (1900–1995), sculptor[1]
Calvin Burnett (1921–2007), book illustrator[1]
Pauline Powell Burns (1872–1912), painter
John Bush (?–1754), powder horn carver
Bisa Butler (born 1973), quilter
Robert Butler (1943–2014), painter
C–D
Frank Calloway (1915–2014)
E. Simms Campbell (1906–1971), cartoonist[1]
Allen 'Big Al' Carter (1947–2008)
Fred Carter (born 1938), cartoonist
Bernie Casey (1939–2017), painter[1]
Elizabeth Catlett (1915–2012), sculptor and printmaker[2] [1]
Nick Cave (born 1959), performance artist
Michael Ray Charles (born 1967), painter[2]
Barbara Chase-Riboud (born 1936), sculptor[1]
Jamour Chames (born 1989), painter
Don Hogan Charles (1938–2017), photographer
Caitlin Cherry (born 1987), painter and sculptor
Claude Clark (1915–2001), painter and printmaker[2]
Edward Clark (1926–2019), painter
Sonya Clark (born 1967), textile and multimedia artist
Willie Cole (born 1955), painter[2]
Robert Colescott (1925–2009), painter[2]
Eldzier Cortor (1916–2015), artist and printmaker[1]
Pamela Council (born 1986), multidisciplinary artist, sculptor
Ernest Crichlow (1914–2005), social realist artist[1]
Allan Crite (1910–2007), painter[2] [1]
Njideka Akunyili Crosby (born 1983), painter
Emilio Cruz (1938–2004), painter[2]
Frank E. Cummings III (born 1938), woodworker
Michael Cummings (born 1945), textile artist
Ulysses Davis (1913–1990), sculptor[2]
Bing Davis (born 1937), potter and graphic artist[1]
Charles C. Dawson (1889–1981) illustrator, painter, and printmaker
Roy DeCarava (1919–2009), photographer[2]
Beauford Delaney (1901–1979), painter[8]
Joseph Delaney (1904–1991)[2]
Xiomara De Oliver (born 1967), Canadian-born American painter.[9]
Woody De Othello (born 1991), ceramicist, painter
Louis Delsarte (1944–2020), artist[1]
Joseph Clinton Devillis (1878–1912), painter
Thornton Dial (1928–2016)[2]
Terry Dixon (born 1969), painter and multimedia artist
Jeff Donaldson (1932–2004), painter and critic
Aaron Douglas (1899–1979), painter[2] [1]
Emory Douglas (born 1943), Black Panther artist
John E. Dowell Jr. (born 1941), printmaker, etcher, lithographer, and painter
David Driskell (1931–2020), artist and scholar
Robert Seldon Duncanson (1821–1872), Hudson River School [2] [1]
Edward Dwight (born 1933) sculptor, painter, author
E–H
Walter Edmonds (1938– 2011), muralist
William Edmondson (1874–1951), folk art sculptor[2] [1]
Allan L. Edmunds (born 1949), printmaker
Mel Edwards (born 1937), sculptor[2] [1]
Janiva Ellis (born 1987), painter
Walter Ellison (1899–1977), painter[2]
Minnie Evans (1892–1987), folk artist[2] [1]
Lola Flash (born 1959), photographer
LaToya Ruby Frazier (born 1982), photographer
Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller (1877–1968), artist[2] [1]
Ellen Gallagher (born 1965)[2]
Reginald Gammon (1921-2005), painter, printmaker, activist
Melvino Garretti (born 1946)[10]
Theaster Gates (born 1973), sculptor, ceramicist, and performance artist
Reginald K (Kevin) Gee (born 1964), painter
Herbert Gentry (1919–2003), painter
Wilda Gerideau-Squires (born 1946), photographer
Robert A. Gilbert (c. 1870 – 1942), nature photographer[11]
Leah Gilliam (born 1967), media artist and filmmaker
Sam Gilliam (1933–2022), painter[2] [1]
Russell T. Gordon (1936–2013), printmaker[2]
Billy Graham (1935–1999), comic book artist
Lonnie Graham , photographer and installation artist
Deborah Grant (born 1968), painter
Todd Gray (born 1954), photographer, installation and performance artist
Leamon Green (born 1959)
Renee Green (born 1959), installation artist[2]
Mario Gully, comic book artist
Tyree Guyton (born 1955)[2]
Ed Hamilton (born 1947), sculptor
Patrick Earl Hammie (born 1981), painter
David Hammons (born 1943), artist[2]
Trenton Doyle Hancock (born 1974)[2]
Austin Hansen (1910–1996), photographer
John Wesley Hardrick (1891–1948), painter[2] [1]
Edwin Harleston (1882–1931), painter
Elise Forrest Harleston (1891–1970), photographer
Jerry Harris (1945–2016), sculptor
John T. Harris (1908-1972), painter, printmaker, educator
Kira Lynn Harris (born 1963), multidisciplinary[12]
Lawrence Harris (born 1937), painter
Ilana Harris-Babou (born 1991), sculptor and installation artist[13]
Marren Hassenger (born 1947), sculptor, installation, performance[14]
Palmer Hayden (1893–1973), painter[2] [1]
Barkley Hendricks (1945–2017), painter
Nestor Hernández (1961–2006), photographer
George Herriman (1880–1944), cartoonist[2]
LaToya M. Hobbs (born 1988) printmaker, painter, mixed media artist [15]
Alvin Hollingsworth (1928–2000), illustrator, painter
Humbert Howard (1905 or 1915-1990), painter, ceramicist
William Howard (active 19th century), American woodworker and craftsman
Bryce Hudson (born 1979), painter, sculptor[2]
Julien Hudson (1811–1844), painter, sculptor[2]
David Huffman (born 1963), painter[16]
Edward Ellis Hughes (1940-2017), painter
Richard Hunt (born 1935), sculptor[2] [1]
Clementine Hunter (1886/7–1988), folk artist[2] [1]
J–O
Wadsworth Jarrell (born 1929), painter, sculptor
Oliver Lee Jackson (born 1935), painter, sculptor, printmaker, educator
Tomashi Jackson (born 1980), multimedia artist, painter, videographer, textile-maker and sculptor[17]
Steffani Jemison (born 1981), performance artist, video artist
Wilmer Angier Jennings (1910–1990), printmaker, painter, jeweler
Annette P. Jimerson (born 1966), painter
Joshua Johnson (c. 1763 – c. 1824), portrait painter and folk artist[2] [1]
LeRoy Johnson (born 1937), multidisciplinary artist
Malvin Gray Johnson (1896–1934), painter[1]
Martina Johnson-Allen (born 1947), painter, sculptor, and printmaker, educator
Rashid Johnson (born 1977), conceptual artist
Sargent Johnson (1888–1967), sculptor[2] [1]
William H. Johnson (1902–1970)[2] [1]
Calvin B. Jones (1934–2010), painter, muralist
Ida E. Jones , painter
Jennie C. Jones (born 1968), multidisciplinary
Lois Mailou Jones (1905–1998), painter[2] [1]
Lawrence A. Jones (1910–1996), artist, teacher
Samuel Levi Jones (born 1978), painter, assemblage artist
Seitu Jones (born 1951), multidisciplinary, sculptor
Eddie Jack Jordan (1925–1999), artist, teacher
Ronald Joseph (1910–1992), artist, teacher, and printmaker
Titus Kaphar (born 1976), painter[18]
Richard Gordon Kendall (1933–2008), Texas-based outsider artist
Autumn Knight (born 1980), interdisciplinary artist working with performance, installation, and text[19]
Gwendolyn Knight (1914–2005), artist[1]
Jacob Lawrence (1917–2000), painter[2] [1]
Deana Lawson (born 1979), photographer[20]
Carolyn Lazard (born 1987), conceptual artist
Hughie Lee-Smith (1915–1999), artist[2] [1]
Simone Leigh (born 1967), sculpture, ceramics
Edmonia Lewis (c. 1843 – 1879), artist[2] [1]
Nate Lewis (born 1985), visual artist
Norman Lewis (1909–1979), painter[2] [1]
Joe Louis Light (1934–2005), painter and sculptor
Glenn Ligon (born 1960), painter[2]
James Little (born 1952), painter, curator
Willie Little (born 1961), multimedia artist, painter, sculptor, author
Llanakila , artist, painter, digital illustrator, and digital artist
Edward L. Loper, Sr. (1916–2011), painter
Whitfield Lovell (born 1960), artist
Alvin D. Loving (1935–2005), artist
Eric N. Mack (born 1987), painter, multi-media installation artist, and sculptor[21]
Gwendolyn Ann Magee (1943–2011), artist, quilter[22]
Clarence Major (born 1936), painter
Ajuan Mance , visual artist, professor[23]
Kerry James Marshall (born 1955), painter[2]
Eugene J. Martin (1938–2005), painter
Louise Martin (1911–1995), photographer
Richard Mayhew (born 1934), Afro-Native American, landscape painter[24]
Valerie Maynard (born 1937), sculptor, printmaker, painter
Ealy Mays (born 1959), painter
William McBride (artist) (1912–2000), artist, designer and collector
Howard McCalebb (born 1947), artist
Corky McCoy, illustrator
Charles McGee , (1924–2021) painter
Charles McGill (1964–2017), artist, educator
Julie Mehretu (born 1970), painter, printmaker
Troy Michie (born 1985), collage artist, painter, interdisciplinary installation artist, and sculptor
Nicole Miller (born 1982), video artist
Joe Minter (born 1943) sculptor, creator of African Village in America[25]
Dean Mitchell (born 1957), painter
Scipio Moorhead (active 1770s), painter[1]
Barbara Tyson Mosley (born 1950), abstract painter[26]
Archibald Motley (1891–1981), painter[2] [1]
Zora J. Murff (born 1987), photographer
Wangechi Mutu (born 1972) painter, sculptor
Gus Nall (1919–1995), painter
Senga Nengudi (born 1943), sculptor, performance artist
Harold Newton (1934–1994), artist
Lorraine O'Grady (born 1934), conceptual artist
Turtel Onli (born 1952), cartoonist
Jackie Ormes (1911–1985), cartoonist
John Outterbridge (1933–2020), assemblage artist[2] [1]
Joe Overstreet (1933–2019), artist[1]
P–S
Jennifer Packer (born 1985), painter
Gordon Parks (1912–2006), photographer, director[2] [1]
Cecelia Pedescleaux (born 1945), quilter
Janet Taylor Pickett (born 1948), mixed media artist
Delilah Pierce (1904–1992), artist
Earle M. Pilgrim (1923–1976), artist
Howardena Pindell (born 1943), painter[2]
Jerry Pinkney (1939–2021), illustrator[2]
Adrian Piper (born 1948), conceptual artist[2]
Rose Piper (1917–2005), painter and textile designer[27]
Horace Pippin (1888–1946), painter[2] [1]
P. H. Polk (1898–1984), photographer
Stephanie Pogue (1944–2002), printmaker
Carl Robert Pope (born 1961), photographer[2]
William Pope.L (born 1955) conceptual artist
Charles Ethan Porter (1847/49–1923) painter
Harriet Powers (1837–1910), folk artist[2]
Walter Price (artist) (born 1989), painter
Martin Puryear (born 1941), sculptor[2] [1]
Mavis Pusey (1928–2019), abstract painter
Patrick H. Reason (1816–1898)
Earle Wilton Richardson (1912–1935), artist[1]
Taft Richardson Jr. (1943–2008), folk artist
Faith Ringgold (born 1930), painter[2] [1]
Haywood Rivers (1922–2001), painter
Amber Robles-Gordon , installation artist
Arthur Rose Sr. (1921–1995), multidisciplinary
Bayeté Ross Smith (born 1976), photographer
Alison Saar (born 1956), artist[2] [1]
Betye Saar (born 1926), artist[2] [1]
Charles L. Sallée Jr. (1923–2006), painter[2] [28]
Reginald Sanders (1921–2001), visual artist
Raymond Saunders (born 1934), painter[1]
Augusta Savage (1892–1962), sculptor[2] [1]
Dread Scott (born 1965), performance, photography, installation, screen-printing and video
John T. Scott (1940–2007), artist
Joyce J. Scott (born 1948), sculptor[2]
Lorenzo Scott (born 1934), painter
William Edouard Scott (1884–1964), painter[2] [1]
Charles Searles (1937-2004), painter, sculptor
Charles Sebree (1914–1985), painter[2] [1]
Thomas Sills (1914–2000), painter
Gary Simmons (born 1964), artist
Lorna Simpson (born 1960), artist[2]
Merton Simpson (1928–2013), painter
William Simpson (1818–1872), portrait painter[1]
Ferrari Sheppard (born 1983), painter
Amy Sherald (born 1973), painter
Carroll Sockwell (1943–1992), abstract painter[29]
Jeff Sonhouse (born 1968), painter
Cauleen Smith (born 1967), filmmaker
Leslie Smith III (born 1985), painter
Vincent D. Smith (1929–2003), painter and printmaker[30] [31]
William E. Smith (1913–1997), painter and printmaker
Gilda Snowden (1954–2014)[2]
Mitchell Squire (born 1958), American installation artist, sculptor and performance artist
Raymond Steth (1916–1997)[2]
Renee Stout (born 1958), artist[2]
Thelma Johnson Streat (1911–1959) American painter, dancer, educator
Martine Syms (born 1988), artist
T–Z
Henry Ossawa Tanner (1859–1937), artist[2] [1]
Ron Tarver (born 1957), photographer, artist, and educator
Margaret Taylor-Burroughs (1915–2010)[2] [1]
Alma Thomas (1891–1978), painter[2] [1]
Hank Willis Thomas (born 1976), photographer
Mickalene Thomas (born 1971), painter and installation artist
Bob Thompson (1937–1966), painter[2] [1]
Mildred Thompson (1935–2003), abstract painter, printmaker and sculptor
Dox Thrash (1892–1962), printmaker, sculptor[2] [1]
Bill Traylor (1856–1949)[2] [1]
Henry Taylor (born 1958), painter
Yvonne Edwards Tucker (born 1941), potter[32]
Adejoke Tugbiyele (born 1977), sculptor, multidisciplinary artist[33]
Morrie Turner (1923–2014), cartoonist
James Van Der Zee (1886–1983), photographer[2] [1]
Kara Walker (born 1969), artist[2] [1]
William Walker (1927–2011), Chicago muralist
Eugene Warburg , (1825–1859), sculptor
Laura Wheeler Waring (1887–1948), painter[2] [1]
E. M. Washington (born 1962), printmaker and counterfeiter
Cullen Washington, Jr. (born 1972) abstract painter.[34]
James W. Washington, Jr. (1908–2000), painter and sculptor[1]
Howard N. Watson (1929–2022), watercolor painter
Richard J. Watson (B. 1946), painter, printmaker
Lewis Watts
Carrie Mae Weems (born 1953), photographer[2]
Pheoris West (1950–2021)
Charles Wilbert White (1918–1979), muralist[2] [1]
Fo Wilson, Interdisciplinary artist and designer
Jack Whitten (1939–2018), painter
Kehinde Wiley (born 1977), painter
Gerald Williams (artist) (born 1941), painter
William T. Williams (born 1942), painter[1]
Deborah Willis (born 1948), photographer
Ellis Wilson (1899–1977), painter[2] [1]
Fred Wilson (born 1954), conceptual artist
John Woodrow Wilson (1922–2015), sculptor[2] [1]
Beulah Woodard (1895–1955), sculptor
Hale Woodruff (1900–1980), painter[2] [1]
Richard Wyatt, Jr. (born 1955), painter, muralist
Richard Yarde (1939–2011), watercolorist
Joseph Yoakum (1890–1972), self-taught landscape artist
Kenneth Victor Young (1933–2017), painter, designer, educator[35]
Purvis Young (1943–2010), artist
Artist groups
The Highwaymen
AfriCOBRA
Where We At
Spiral (arts alliance)
See also
United States portal
Visual arts portal
Harlem Renaissance
African-American art
The Quilts of Gees Bend
Black Arts Movement
List of American artists before 1900
List of American artists 1900 and after
References
See the entry in Macklin, A. D., A Biographical History of African-American Artists . The Edwin Mellen Press; 2001. ISBN 0-7734-7676-8 Listed in the Chronological listing of African-American artists at ArtCyclopedia "Nellie Ashford among 5 artists selected for art installations at Charlotte Douglas Airport" . CLTure . April 10, 2018. Retrieved December 24, 2019 . Sheets, Hilarie M. (June 30, 2011). "In the Picture: Atlanta, Africa and the Past" . The New York Times . Retrieved December 20, 2017 . KOSLOW MILLER, FRANCINE (Summer 2012). "Radcliffe Bailey" . Artforum . Vol. 50, no. 10. Retrieved December 20, 2017 . Parris, Nina G; Columbia Museum of Art; Arkansas Arts Center; Mississippi Museum of Art (1985). Through a master printer: Robert Blackburn and the Printmaking Workshop . Columbia, S.C.: Columbia Museum. OCLC 14693839 . Shaw, Kurt (September 7, 2014). "Homewood Artist's 'Fragments' Looks at Cultures in Our World" . Pittsburgh Tribune Review . Retrieved March 30, 2016 – via EBSCO. David Leeming, Amazing Grace: A Life of Beauford Delaney , Oxford University Press; 1998. ISBN 0-19-509784-X "De Oliver, Xiomara" . Le Delarge -Le dictionnaire des arts plastiques modernes et contemporains (in French). Retrieved August 20, 2021 .{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) Troupe, Margaret Porter (April 11, 2014). "Spring Art Show: Melvino Garretti" . Harlem Arts Salon . Retrieved January 15, 2020 . Mitchell, John Hanson (August 12, 2014). Looking for Mr. Gilbert: The Unlikely Life of the First African American Landscape Photographer . Open Road Distribution. pp. 100–. ISBN 9781497672826 . Retrieved November 28, 2017 . "The Artist's Voice: Kira Lynn Harris In Conversation with Lauren Haynes" . The Studio Museum in Harlem. Retrieved April 2, 2015 . Steinhauer, Jillian (February 25, 2019). "The Whitney Biennial: 75 Artists Are In, and One Dissenter Steps Out" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved March 21, 2019 . "Maren Hassinger" . YBCA . Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Retrieved March 14, 2016 . "LaToya M. Hobbs" . www.latoyamhobbs.com . Murray, Derek Conrad (2012). "David Huffman" . Art in America . Vol. April 6. Retrieved April 2, 2015 . "Rhythm and Blues: Tomashi Jackson by Cora Fisher – BOMB Magazine" . bombmagazine.org . Retrieved March 21, 2019 . "Titus Kaphar's Time Magazine Commission" . International Review of African American Art . Retrieved March 15, 2016 . "Workshop | fluid with Artist Autumn Knight" . Contemporary Arts Museum Houston . Retrieved March 21, 2019 . "Deana Lawson" . Lewis Center for the Arts . Archived from the original on May 4, 2017. Retrieved March 31, 2016 . Sargent, Antwaun (April 9, 2018). "Meet the Mixed-Media Painter Inspired by Lil' Kim" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved March 21, 2019 . Moye, Dorothy, "Lift Every Voice and Sing: The Quilts of Gwendolyn Ann Magee" Archived November 15, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Southern Spaces , September 11, 2014. Robertson, Michelle; SFGATE (November 1, 2017). "An Oakland artist drew 1,001 portraits of black men" . SFGate . Retrieved January 3, 2020 . "Richard Mayhew" . Smithsonian American Art Museum . Retrieved March 3, 2018 . Tortorello, Michael (April 24, 2013). "Joe Minter's African Village in America" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved March 21, 2019 . "Barbara Tyson-Mosley" . National Gallery of Art . Retrieved February 4, 2021 . "African American Fine Art Auction" . Tyler Fine Art . November 11, 2014. p. 128. Retrieved January 25, 2017 – via issuu. "Artist Charles L. Sallee Jr. remembered; his artwork is on display in Beachwood" . cleveland.com . December 9, 2011. Retrieved April 19, 2018 . "Artist's Black Painting Praised By D.C. Critic". Jet . Johnson Publishing Company. March 4, 1971. p. 14. Sirmans, M. Franklin (1997). Smith, Vincent (Dacosta) . Detroit: St. James Guide to Black Artists. ISBN 1558622209 . Smothers, Ronald (January 3, 2004). "Vincent Smith, 74, Painter Who Portrayed Black Life" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved May 23, 2017 . Copelon, Dianne (February 11, 1996). "Artisans Shape Visions of Black History, Culture" . Orlando Sentinel . Retrieved May 14, 2020 . Preece, Robert (September 23, 2020). "Beyond Physicality: A Conversation with Adejoke Tugbiyele" . Sculpture . Retrieved November 30, 2021 . McQuaid, Cate (December 23, 2009). "Behind the mask of 'Hero's'" . Boston.com . Retrieved September 5, 2021 . Powell, Richard J.; Mecklenburg, Virginia McCord; Slowik, Theresa (2012). African American Art: Harlem Renaissance, The Civil Rights Era, and Beyond . Smithsonian American Art Museum. Skira Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0847838905 .
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