'Embracing Blackness: Diasporic Realities' is on exhibit

May 10 – July 27, 2025 @ Customs House Museum and Cultural Center

The Customs House Museum & Cultural Center in collaboration with Crafting Blackness Initiative present ‘Embracing Blackness: Diasporic Unions’ in partnership with Tennessee Craft, ETSU Slocumb Galleries and support from the Tennessee Arts Commission. The exhibition celebrates work by artists of African descent based in Tennessee whose diverse multicultural heritages influence and visualize the Black identities and experiences. The public is invited to visit the exhibition with opening reception Saturday, May 10, from 5 to 7 p.m. with participating artists, reading by Poet Laureate Henry L. Jones, Thandiwe Shiphrah, and guest of honor County Mayor Wes Golden.

Co-curated by Crafting Blackness Initiative co-director Karlota Contreras-Koterbay and Tennessee Craft’s board director Carlton Wilkinson, the curatorial locus revolves around ‘Blackness as Inclusion,’ assertions of the vital reality of Black gazes’ capacity to embrace cultures. The featured artists include stellar line up headed by Clarksville very own master craft artist Ludie Amos, Alice Aida Ayers, Seyi Babalola, Olasubomi Aka-Bashorun, Marteja Bailey, Omari Booker, Brittney Boyd Bullock, LeXander Bryant, Jane Buis, Landry Butler, Bill Capshaw, Gail Clemons, Tina Curry, Samuel Dunson, Kimberly Dummons, Amanda Ewing, Jason Flack, Cynthia Gadsden, Earline Green, Barbara Hodges, Leroy Hodges, Jay (3 Woke) Jenkins,Alexis Jones, Henry L. Jones, Ted Jones, Gediyon Kifle, Wilson Lee Jr., Dashawn Lewis,Hattie Marshall-Duncan, Toberta + Wokie Massaquoi-Wicks, Aundra McCoy, Rod McGaha, Armon Means, Lester Merriweather, LaKesha Moore, Andrew Morrison, Elisheba Mrozik,Michael Mucker, Althea Murphy-Price, Calvin Nicely, Jairo Prado, Christine Roth, Ashley Seay, Thandiwe Shiphrah, Lorenzo Swinton, Betty Turner, Maya Turner, Gary L. White,Ramona Wiggins, Carlton Wilkinson, Donna Woodley, Kevin Wurm with works by influential historical artists William Edmondson, Bessie Harvey, Earl J. Hooks, Sammie Nicely,Greg Ridley and memorial to Alicia Henry.

The exhibition explores the Black identities coalesced around intercultural influences, forged by displacement, interracial unions and various geographic mobilities rooted from Africa across the seas. Participating artists identify as Black creatives as descendants, as they experience, living with, and being with Black culture that collectively defines Blackness in its myriad ways, a form of resistance to the aesthetic of exclusion, that has plagued the country’s history and social dynamics. Co-curator Carlton Wilkinson emphasizes, the “Black pigment in the physical definition includes the presence of all colors”as he adds, the combination of “parts of red, green, and yellow will make the color black.”In the United States, a country of migrants borne out of colonial enterprise, its Black people share lineages with many cultures and groups worldwide. Blacks who identify their lineage from the formerly enslaved groups, to labor and academics who came as migrants, refugees or scholars, and those from military service are as many shades and narratives intertwined made visible, understood and embraced.

As part of multi community engagement activities, ‘Embracing Blackness Panel’ and performance by Giovanni Rodriguez and Friends are scheduled July 10, First Thursday during the Clarksville Crawl from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Customs House Museum & Cultural Center galleries The Embracing Blackness panelists are Samuel Dunson, Christine Roth, Rod McGaha, Gary L. White and Hattie Marshall Duncan, facilitated by co-curators Wilkinson and Contreras-Koterbay. The panel starts at 5 to 6 p.m. at the Customs House Museum galleries followed by the dance performance from 6 to 7 p.m. at the courtyard.

The exhibition is on view until July 27 and is part of the Crafting Blackness Initiative, a research, traveling exhibition and publication project on the 100 years history of Black Craft artists of Tennessee. Supported by the Tennessee Arts Commission, South Arts, East Tennessee Foundation, Bravissima! Women Sponsoring the Arts and various partners through ETSU Slocumb Galleries. Historical works on loan courtesy of institutional partners Knoxville Museum of Art, Trahern Family Collection of Austin Peay State University, Tom & O.E. Stigall Ethnic Museum & Library, Allison and Martha Alfonso, Bill Hickerson, Carlton Wilkinson and the Carl Van Vechten Gallery of Fisk University.

For more information about the Crafting Blackness Initiative, visithttps://tennesseecraft.org/crafting-blackness/or email co-director Karlota Contreras-Koterbay atcontrera@etsu.edu. The Customs House Museum and Cultural Center is located at 200 S 2ndSt., Clarksville Tennesssee, with viewing hours daily except Mondays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Contact the museum for handicapped services accommodations at 931.648.5780.

Category: Exhibits

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