Stella Jones Gallery

- THE Place for Fine Black Art-

Stella Jones Gallery's Instagram
Saturday, February 15th, from 3 PM to 4 PM
It features Master Printmaker and educator Steve Prince, who will be giving a REMOTE ART TALK discussing Elizabeth Catlett’s influence.
Elizabeth Catlett & Samella Lewis
The Teacher/Student Conversation

Saturday, March 29th | 2pm - 3pm

Lavett Ballard "A Little Bitter with your Sweet"

Saturday exhibition hours: 10am - 5pm

Unbound and Unapologetic
Current Exhibition

Unbound and Unapologetic

March 3 - April 18, 2026

Group Exhibition

Unbound and Unapologetic is a group exhibition examining the representation of women through the work of artists of the African Diaspora. Spanning historical and contemporary practices, the exhibition brings together painting, sculpture, collage, and mixed media works that engage questions of identity, authorship, agency, and visibility across generations.

The exhibition’s conceptual framework resists singular or prescriptive narratives. Unbound speaks to a release from racialized, gendered, and historical constraints that have traditionally shaped how women – particularly Black women – are framed within art history. Unapologetic affirms presence without concession, emphasizing self-definition, scale, and material authority. Rather than offering a unified thesis, the exhibition privileges multiplicity, allowing meaning to emerge through formal, material, and thematic relationships among the works.

Across abstraction and figuration, modernist and contemporary lineages, the works draw from diverse schools of thought, including social realism, symbolic figuration, collage-based narrative, and sculptural traditions rooted in both classical and vernacular forms. These approaches reflect a sustained dialogue between personal experience and collective history, situating women as central, active subjects rather than symbolic or peripheral figures.

Through its range of media and methodologies, Unbound and Unapologetic invites sustained engagement with how women are represented, honored, and asserted within visual culture. The exhibition positions women not as fixed ideas, but as expansive, evolving presences that are fully visible within the broader continuum of art history.

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