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The museum catches up to the vital lessons of the Harlem Renaissance, with its American, European and African exchanges and its cultural solidarity. William Henry Johnson, “Street Life, Harlem ...
A young couple poses on West 127th Street in Harlem with their shiny new Cadillac. She wears a cloche hat and a slight smile, he offers a cool stare from underneath the capacious brim of a fedora ...
A new exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art shows artists from the Harlem Renaissance taking ownership of Black history. Race and Identity Reporter The New Negro Movement was a celebration of ...
The history of the Harlem Renaissance didn’t end with the Second World War, and while this show hints at how it was processed during the Civil Rights era, that could be its own show, eagerly ...
A new book details over 100 years of Met Museum history. ... Fortunately for the Met — but unfortunately for the 99% — post-Civil War ... Take the 1969 show “Harlem on My Mind,” the ...
In 1866, a group of New York’s finest decided that their fair city needed a museum. It would be a big museum. An important museum. A “national” museum that would bring great art and art ...
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