The Black On Black Project

Equity over Equality™

Filtering by Tag: Alexandria Clay

'Paradigm Shifts of Public Spaces: Wilmington'

Exhibition statement: In "Paradigm Shifts of Public Spaces: Wilmington," artists Alexandria P. Clay and Anthony Patterson examine what happens to African-American public spaces after a paradigm shift disrupts communities. The artists use the Wilmington race riot of 1898 and the Wilmington Ten as catalysts. #PSPSWilmington #ALWilmington

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'Colored Me'

Exhibition statement: In one of her most famed essays, "How it Feels to be Colored Me," novelist Zora Neale Hurston speaks on how she "feel[s] most colored when thrown against a sharp white background." Relating to this experience, artist Alexandria Clay explores what an opposite, colored background looks like; one that prioritized, reinforced and supported her own identity. #ColoredMeExhibit

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