Jordan + Nina Chanel Abney Hoodie - COOL HUNTING®
Jordan Brand Reveals New Collaboration With Nina Chanel Abney Celebrating Black Excellence
Nina Chanel Abney x Air Jordan 2 SE On-Foot Look
Nina Chanel Abney Imagines a Queer Black Utopia - The New York Times
African-American artist Nina Chanel Abney responds to current social issues, her main topic being racial discrimination. Besides this, she makes sport-themed paintings and designs the visuals of…
FIFA Collaboration and Michael Jordan Shoes: I'm an Example that Everything and Anything is Possible, says Nina Chanel Abney
This very, very special UNO set has been completely reimagined by Nina, authentically capturing her bright, energetic and eclectic style.
Mattel Creations Past Drops - UNO x Nina Chanel Abney
The Business and Backstory of J Balvin's Air Jordan 2 Collaboration - Boardroom
Renowned Chicago artist Nina Chanel Abney is joining forces with Jordan Brand for a unique, streamlined take on the Air Jordan 2 in a white and gym red colorway.
Nina Chanel Abney and the Air Jordan 2 Get Artsy
UNO Releases Chanel Pre - hebilla ardillón de acero con firma Chanel
In “The Culture,” which closes Sunday, Black women artists like Megan Lewis, Murjoni Merriweather, and Caitlin Cherry translate the power of Black women in hip-hop into their art.
Review: 'The Culture' at Baltimore Museum of Art –
POLITICS PAST AND PRESENT coursed through the art world in 2017. Issues of censorship and debates around who has the right to depict black bodies came to the fore. The biggest news stories, from White House machinations, gun violence, and immigration to the fate of Confederate monuments, racial division, and sexual harassment and assault revelations, directly affected some institutions, were reflected in the work of artists, and prompted many to take action through open letters, protests, and special campaigns and projects. The contemporary moment is reminiscent of the 1960s and 70s when the Civil Rights, Black Power, and Women’s Rights Movements, and efforts to diversify art institutions dominated the discourse. Exhibitions documenting these historic years were some of the most compelling of 2017. “Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power” at the Tate Modern in London, “We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85” organized by the Brooklyn Museum, and “Magnetic Fields: Expanding American Abstraction, 1960s,” currently on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, present works by pioneering African American artists and brought attention to overlooked figures. Meanwhile, emerging artists had their first solo museum exhibitions, new artist records were achieved at […]
Culture Type: The Year in Black Art 2017 - Culture Type
Your monthly fix of the best collaborations, limited editions, print releases, podcasts, worthy causes, and fun Instagram accounts to follow.
Art Crush: All the Things We Want This Month - ELEPHANT
Jonathan David signs a deal with Adidas and Fly Nowhere.
Jonathan David Goes All Out
pulls back in the Air Jordan 6 White Infrared