@loveshutterbug, Black Royalty, shared the text and images below.

Back when my daughter, Charlotte Adventure, was about 3 years old, I did a photo series of my daughter portraying important Black [Women] through history.

For a toddler, she ATE THIS UP! Here she is as the great #SojournerTruth, #MadamCJWalker, and #RosaParks

#blackwomen #92percent #blackhistory #blackartists #blackphotographers #blackmastodon

Today’s art history post features photography history: “Christmas Morning,” 1933, photo by James Van Der Zee (1886-1983), hand painted gelatin silver print. #photography #darkroomphotography #studiophotography #PhotographyHistory #Christmas #blackphotographer #blackphotographers #blackhistory

From Thelma Golden, Aperture Magazine, Summer, 2016: “VanDerZee pictured families, couples, social clubs, and church groups in moments of communal joy and beauty. His subjects were acutely aware of the brutal segregation and economic inequality of the world of that era, yet stood in proud opposition to it-providing a visual framework for imagining a different future. Eighty-three years later, Christmas Morning continues to resonate.

The photographs of VanDerZee and his contemporaries comprise a compelling visual document of black pride and self-determination at a particular moment in history, yet in the present moment they remain a potent symbol of the transformative power of photographic representation.”

First-of-Its-Kind Exhibition Explores Photography’s Role in the Black Arts Movement

The exhibition includes over 150 works.

PetaPixel

Renee Cox (born October 16, 1960) is a Jamaican-American artist, photographer, lecturer, political activist and curator.

Background
Cox has "dedicated her career to deconstructing stereotypes and to reconfiguring the black woman's body, using her nude form as a subject."

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#blackwomen #blackpeople #blackamerican #blackmastodon #blackcaribbean #blackartists #blackphotographers #blacklecturers #blactivists #blackcurators

Cornelius Marion Battey (August 26, 1873 – March 14, 1927)

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#blackmen #blackpeople #blackamerican #blackphotographers #blackhistory

Brenda Patricia Agard (20 August 1961 – 29 October 2012) was a Black-[british] photographer, artist, poet and storyteller

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#blackwomen #blackpeople #blackbritish #blackphotographers #blackartists #blackpoets #blackstorytellers #blackmastodon

Al Smith of Seattle documented the lives of Black Seattleites for much of the 20th century, He didn't show his work until the 1980s. " 1986, Smith began volunteering at MOHAI, developing some of the museum’s negatives in a darkroom.

After a few months, he revealed to MOHAI photography curator Howard Giske that he was something of a photographer himself. He shared a few photos and Giske immediately realized the significance of Smith’s work."
#BlackHistory #BlackPhotographers
https://blackartslegacies.cascadepbs.org/articles/al-smith

Al Smith: Reflecting Black life in Seattle

For much of the 20th century, the “on the spot” photographer captured striking images, from jazz clubs to boxing matches to community celebrations.

Black Arts Legacies

I created a new video message for my amazing Patreon subscribers this morning. Their support motivates me to be the best freelance photographer I can be.

If you're a Creative Chaos Photography supporter, click the link to see the video!

https://www.patreon.com/posts/86525291

#NYC #TheBronx #Manhattan #Brooklyn #Queens #StatenIsland #QueerMarch #PrideMonth #Patreon #ILoveMyPatrons #StreetPhotography #ILoveNewYork #BlackPhotographers #BlackIsBeautiful #EmbraceChaos #ChaosPhotos

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