BLACK ART 2025 — THE FORECAST
Read the newsletter in its entirety here.
What trends are you forecasting for Black art in 2025? How will the political climate impact arts funding? Pigment International wants to know. Have a prognostication for the new year please share it with us at pigmentintl@gmail.com. We might reach out for your opinion, so be prepared.
And make sure to check out our Pigment Newsletter’s January 5th issue, when we cover the must-see exhibitions for January — March 2025.
MIAMI PHOTO GALLERY
Please enjoy these photos from Miami Art Week and many thanks to Ming Joi, The Joi of Art and Vincent Ugokwe, Dozie Arts for capturing these images.
LAST MINUTE HOLIDAY SHOPPING
Last day (December 15) to save 20% on fine jewelry from Dorian Webb. Enter code PIGMENT at checkout and receive a complimentary copy of Pigment Magazine.
Pigment Magazine offers storytelling that can’t be found anywhere else. Through December 15th our readers can save 20% off the brand’s award winning designs. The eponymous jeweler is known for her ability to craft both semi precious and precious jewelry that shares stories and perspectives, her jewelry is collected internationally by women making a difference.
And for last minute holiday shopping pick up a Pigment International Magazine at these Black owned retailers — Connect Gallery, Essential Elements, Fourtune House Gallery and Women’s Live Artist Studio in Navy Pier all in the CHI.
HAPPY 10TH ANNIVERSARY ARTS.BLACK
This month marks the 10th anniversary of ARTS.BLACK. Pigment International covered the groundbreaking editors Jessica Lynne and Taylor Aldridge in 2018.
As we embark on a year of following our north star, Art |Activism | Empowering Black Women, we are excited to share their milestone. Big ideas and beliefs about writing and how it might live in harmony with other thinkers and artists led the friends to start the platform in 2014. They wanted art criticism to have a stake in conversations about Black art, however imperfect they were. The question they sought to answer was where are all the black art critics?
Lynne and Aldridge have answered that question now for a decade.
SAYING GOODBYE TO GIANTS
While we have all been thrown for a loop with the deaths of Quincy Jones and Nikki Giovanni, the art world is mourning the passing of grand dame Lorraine O’Grady. IG has been overflowing with photos and praise and Pigment is sad that we never had the pleasure to meet, mainly because she looked as if she was having a ball.
O’Grady, 90, was a concept-based artist and cultural critic widely regarded as a leading intellectual voice of her generation. Working across media and disciplines — including writing, photography, performance, curating, installation, and video O’Grady challenged artistic and cultural conventions through her incisive critique of the binary logic inherent in Western thought.
In the words of Dawoud Bey, “May Lorraine’s spirit soar and be at peace. Her legacy will continue to inspire present and future generations.”
Read the newsletter in its entirety here.
