Amoako Boafo: Creating space to celebrate Blackness
BBC
June 16, 2025
Amoako Boafo has attracted global fame for his bold and sensual portraits. He paints bodies and faces using his fingertips instead of a brush, capturing form through direct, tactile gestures. When he went to art school in Vienna, he was struck by the extent to which Black subjects had been overlooked in global art. Determined to change the status quo, he drew inspiration from early 20th Century Viennese artists like Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele and added his own techniques to invent a fresh new style of portraiture.
36 of the Most Influential Female Artists Throughout History | Featuring Betye Saar
Harper's Bazaar
May 23, 2025
By Ariana Marsh
One of the most celebrated artists in the medium of assemblage, Betye Saar was born in Los Angeles, where she studied in design. In 1967, she visited an exhibition by found objects sculptor Joseph Cornell, which radically impacted her artistic trajectory. She began lining assemblage boxes with her own prints and drawings, and filling them with found objects, creating pieces that addressed race and current events.
Portraits Revealed | Featuring Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe and Lenz Geerk
Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA
June 8, 2025
Portraits Revealed features group and individual portraits from the Santa Barbara Museum of Art’s extensive collection. The essence of portraiture is that it depicts or alludes to a person or people. Over centuries, the artists in this gallery have told stories, fantasized, and revealed invisible emotions and beliefs. Portraits can be meditations on life and existence, opulent displays of status, or both. This exhibition presses on what counts as a portrait by including a few still-life paintings that use objects to suggest an unseen person or situation.
Suchitra Mattai | with abundance we meet
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, TN
May 22, 2025
with abundance we meet is a new site specific installation by artist Suchitra Mattai at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. Presented in the rotunda of the museum, it features large, fruit-like sculptures—called phala (Hindi for "fruit")—made from braided and woven vintage saris. Suspended from the ceiling, the phala evoke associations with fertility, wombs, and ancestral spirits, and serve as a reflection on the artist’s South Asian heritage.