
University Galleries to Host Visual Artist Radcliffe Bailey to Discuss Race in Art
By Jordan Howse / 11/09/2020 College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences
- 4-H and Youth Development News
- Academic Affairs News
- Accounting and Finance News
- Administration and Instructional Services News
- Admissions News
- Agribusiness, Applied Economics and Agriscience Education News
- Agricultural and Natural Resources News
- All News
- Alumni News
- Animal Sciences News
- Applied Engineering Technology News
- Athletics News
- Biology News
- Built Environment News
- Business and Finance News
- Business Education News
- CAES News
- CAHSS News
- Chancellor's Speaker Series
- Chancellors Town Hall Series
- Chemical, Biological, and Bio Engineering News
- Chemistry News
- Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering News
- COE News
- COED News
- College News
- Community and Rural Development News
- Computational Science and Engineering News
- Computer Science News
- Computer Systems Technology News
- Cooperative Extension News
- COST News
- COST News
- Counseling News
- Criminal Justice News
- Deese College News
- Economics News
- Educator Preparation News
- Electrical and Computer Engineering News
- Employees News
- Energy and Environmental Systems News
- English Department News
- Family and Consumer Sciences News
- Graphic Design Technology News
- Hairston College News
- Headlines News
- History & Political Science News
- Honors College News
- Human Resources News
- Industrial and Systems Engineering News
- Information Technology Services News
- Innovation Station News
- Journalism & Mass Communication
- JSNN News
- Kinesiology News
- Leadership Studies and Adult Education News
- Liberal Studies News
- Library News
- Magazine News
- Management News
- Marketing News
- Mathematics News
- Mechanical Engineering News
- Media Spotlight News
- Natural Resources and Environmental Design News
- News Categories
- Nursing News
- Psychology News
- Research News
- Social Work News
- Strategic Partnerships and Economic Development News
- Student Affairs News
- Students News
- The Graduate College News
- Transportation & Supply Chain
- University Advancement News
- Visual & Performing Arts News
EAST GREENSBORO (Nov. 9, 2020) - The University Galleries at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University will host a virtual program, “The Black Aesthetic: Imagery and Race in Art,” at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 11. The discussion will feature renowned visual artist Radcliffe Bailey and will delve into the historical, societal and political impact that imagery has on people of African descent. Noted actress and author Angela Ray will moderate the discussion.
The virtual program will complement the University Galleries’ current virtual exhibition, “Black Art Matters.” The virtual exhibit features works from the permanent collection that highlights the diversity and emotion of Black art.
Bailey is a contemporary African American artist known for his mixed-media practice that delves into his heritage and childhood in the South. Employing materials that include paint, traditional African sculpture, tintype photographs of his family, clay and piano keys, the artist conveys the powerful sentiment of a living memory.
Born in Bridgeton, N.J., he grew up in Atlanta where he frequented the High Museum of Art with his mother. She introduced her son to the works of James Van Der Zee and Jacob Lawrence. Bailey received his BFA from the Atlanta College of Art. Today, his works are held in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Smithsonian Museum of American Art in Washington, D.C., among others. He continues to live and work in Atlanta.
The virtual program is registration only and the passcode is 151987.
The University Galleries at A&T are part of the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. The University Galleries play an integral role in supporting its mission of providing cultural exposure to art of the African diaspora. As part of the university and surrounding communities, the University Galleries are committed to increasing cultural competency and intellectual dialogue about the art and culture of people from the African diaspora through the exhibition of art, artifacts, and material culture.
Media Contact Information: jmhowse@ncat.edu