News

Known now as a major exponent of the “Negro Renaissance,” Alexander Gumby is among the most forgotten Blacks ever to have lived in Harlem.
The Big Band Jubilee marks its fifth annual music celebration honoring Juneteenth while recognizing Harlem's place in Black ...
Rangel was a resilient, unapologetically, but contradictorily Black warrior, and the St. Aloysius tribute was as much an ...
The Black Comic Book Festival and the Schomburg Literary Festival ran across a full day and featured readings, panel ...
A survey of art and design from the 1940s at the Philadelphia Museum of Art reveals how creativity flourished out of hardship ...
FM, Iowa's only jazz radio station, the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art brings together photographs of jazz musicians taken by ...
Black Theatre Girl Magic’s free Facets of Freedom Festival will this year run day to night in celebration of the arts and ...
The Schomburg Centennial Festival was a reminder that in Harlem, Black joy, memory, and imagination are not just preserved ...
The Department of Transportation unveiled on Friday a new piece of public art on Malcolm X Boulevard and 124th Street — “Aunties” by Harlem-based artist Fitgi Saint-Louis in collaboration with the ...
It is one of the largest repositories of Black history in the country — and its most devoted supporters say not enough people know about it. The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Cultu ...
Selma Burke was a key figure in the Harlem Renaissance movement. The 20th-century sculptor and one-time New Hope resident's most embraceable work is one you probably never knew you've touched.