'The Black Home as Public Art' examines different traditions in the Black canon of architecture at UT Austin this fall
This fall at the UT Austin School of Architecture a new exhibition will examine the creativity of Black artists and activist traditions through notable interventions in vernacular architecture from the 1960s to today. Associate Professor Charles L. Davis II is the exhibition’s organizer. He says the examples on display in The Black Home as Public Art "collectively embody decolonial representations of Blackness in a settler colonial context.” Read the full post on Bustler
This fall at the UT Austin School of Architecture a new exhibition will examine the creativity of Black artists and activist traditions through notable interventions in vernacular architecture from the 1960s to today.
Associate Professor Charles L. Davis II is the exhibition’s organizer. He says the examples on display in The Black Home as Public Art "collectively embody decolonial representations of Blackness in a settler colonial context.”