Brooklyn Art Haus presents group exhibition for Black History Month, also celebrating women
In honor of both Black History Month and Womenโs History Month, Brooklyn Art Haus is gearing up to host a month-long group exhibition called โThe History We Make.โ
Beginning Thursday, the exhibition will serve as a time capsule illuminating the histories of Black and African diasporic communities, using individual experiences collectively to mark how Black history is made every day.ย
Artists featured in the exhibition include Brooklyn-based acrylic painter Jonelle Austin, Harlem-based textile artist Belchez, Brooklyn-based photographer Nigil Crawford, Brooklyn-based publisher and multidisciplinary artist Malik Kirkwood, NYC-based portrait artist Kalae Nouveau, Brooklyn-based Afro-surrealist painter and photographer Fatou Ridgird and NYC-based interdisciplinary artist Shangari. All creatives work across different mediums and disciplines to express their individualized perspectives in relation to Black and Womenโs history.
โThe History We Makeโ will also welcome Everette Hampton, who makes her curatorial debut at Brooklyn Art Haus.
โI was really trying to find artists that spoke to the idea that Black people are not a monolith, we are so many things,โ Hampton told Brooklyn Paper on Tuesday. โI really wanted to find artists who communicated that through their work clearly and thereโs so many things that we battle with as a culture and we are constantly learning more about ourselves and we are trying to realize ourselves in our images in the way in which we want to be received.โ
Through โThe History We Make,โ Hampton felt it was important to highlight the histories of Black communities, but also to show how the present and future interact and intersect with those histories.
โI think we take a lot from our past and weโre always trying to figure out where to put it and if it still speaks to us and how it speaks to us,โ said Hampton. โWe take pieces of our past and allow it to embellish our present. We really allow our โpresentsโ to show up and project our futures.โ
It was also vital to honor both Black History Month and Womenโs History Month in tandem, showing how both experiences and both communities are intrinsically intersected.
โIt was really important to me to have both of them coexist because Black women especially are those who are often ignored, often undervalued, the least loved,โ Hampton said. โAnd I really wanted to protect a space where Black women were being honored and were of course being supported by male artists and by non-binary artists. I believe women are central to all histories.โ
โThe History We Makeโ will debut on Feb. 22 with an opening reception from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Brooklyn Art Haus and will be on display for the general public through March 30.
To learn more about Brooklyn Art Haus, visit bkarthaus.com