James A. Porter Colloquium on African American Art
The James A. Porter Colloquium on African American Art and Art of the African Diaspora is an annual event hosted and sponsored by Howard University.
James Porter is recognized as the "Father of African American art history."[1][2] His book, Modern Negro Art, is the first comprehensive study of African American Art in the United States.[3] In 1990, his Howard colleague, art historian Floyd C. Coleman, created the colloquium to recognize Porter for his distinguished career as an art professor, art department chair, and university art gallery director.[4][5]
Since its founding, the Porter Colloquium has served as a forum for art historians, artists, curators, collectors, and art dealers in the field of African American Art.[3] The annual gatherings have explored issues in the historiography of African American art,[6] promoted diverse artistic perspectives, presented forward-thinking scholarship, and opened doors for the advancement of African American artists and art historians who study art of the African Diaspora.[3][4]
History
Year (Annual)
Title / Theme
Co-Sponsors
Speakers and Moderators
Reference
2024 (34th)
Art Legacies, Aesthetic Futures: Art at Howard University
Melvin Edwards, Phylicia Rashad, Huey Copeland, Steven Nelson, Jonathan P. Binstock, Raimi Gbadamosi, Melanee C. Harvey, Rebecca Van Diver, Jada Adkinson, Edward T. Welburn, Mark Bartley, Cheryl Miller, Tatum Sabin, Samir Meghelli, Kelis George, Adrienne Childs, Denise Murrell, Elyse Nelson, Jessica Bell Brown, Camille Brown, Taylor Aldridge, Jane Carpenter-Rock, Rhea Combs, Kinshasha Holman Conwill, Gwendolyn Everett, Jacqueline Carmichael, Larry W. Cook, Elka Stevens, Reginald Pointer, Sandy Bellamy, Bryten Gant, Takovah Townsend, Maria Fenton, Adrian Loving
Defining Diaspora: 21st Century Developments in Art of the African Diaspora.
David C. Driskell Center, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art, Robert Rauschenberg Foundation, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery
Critical In/Sight: Contemporary Developments in the History and Practice of Black Visual Culture
David C. Driskell Center, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art, Sandra Jackson-Dumont (book donation for all attendees)
Nicole Fleetwood, Margo Natalie Crawford, Raél Jero Salley, Lanisa Kitchener, Steven Nelson, Lola Flash, Martina Dodd, Janell Pryor, Monica O. Montgomery, Anthony Barboza, William T. Williams, Sylvia Snowden, Krista Thompson, Richard Powell, Mel Harvey, Kimberly Drew, Larry Cook, Jordana Moore Saggese, Renee Stout, Michelle Renee Perkins, Courtnee Fenner, Halima Taha, Rachel Grace Newman
Gwendolyn Everett, Gregory N’namdi, Kesha Bruce, Gregory Coates, Melani Douglass, Nikki A. Greene, Charles Brock, Michèle Gates Moresi, Tobias Wofford, Seth Feman, John A. Tyson,
Tuliza Fleming, Robin Veder, Romi Crawford, Kevin Tervala, Evelyn Hankins, Freida High W. Tesfagiorgis, Victor Ekpuk, Lanisa S. Kitchiner, Chakaia Booker, Jessica Stafford Davis, Adrian Loving, Zoma Wallace, Melissa Messina, LeRonn P. Brooks, Margo N. Crawford, Mary Lovelace O’Neal, Fred Eversley, James Maurelle, Amber Robles-Gordon, Valerie Cassel Oliver, Torkwase Dyson, Edward Spriggs, Reginald Pointer
Lorna Simpson, Kinshasha Holman Conwill, Dawoud Bey, Fred Wilson (artist), Adger Cowans, Kellie Jones, Bridget R. Cooks, Lopez Matthews Jr., Andrea Jackson, Pellom McDaniels III, Stephanie Smith, Scott Baker, Gwendolyn Everett, Anthony McEachern, Dalila Scruggs, Gwendolyn Shaw, James D. Smalls, Kirsten Buick, David C. Driskell, Melanee C. Harvey, Larry Cook, Aziza Claudia Gibson-Hunter, Margaret Rose Vendryes, Cynthia Hodge, Kimberly Camp, Kelli Morgan, Alexsandra Mitchell, Catrina Hill, Tina Campt, Chanda Laine Carey, Tiffany E. Barber, Elka Stevens, Marilyn Nance, Sarah Lewis, Allen Jackson
Fearless: Risk Takers, Rule Breakers, and Innovators in African American Art and Art of the African Diaspora
David C. Driskell Center, District of Columbia Commission on the Arts and Humanities (Black Artists of DC exhibit), The Historical Society of Washington, DC
Robert Farris Thompson, Evangeline J. Montgomery, Floyd Coleman, Bennie F. Johnson, Gwendolyn Everett, James Donaldson, Coni Porter Uzelac, Janell Blackmon, Phyllis Jackson, Jacqueline Francis, Mary Ann Calo, Dasha Halkin, Lyneise Williams, John Bowles, Courtney Martin, Tritobia Hayes Benjamin, Nana Mtendaji, Pamela Franco, Cheryl McKay Dixon, Nkiru Nzegwu, Cheryl Finley, Jefferson Pinder, Iona Rozeal Brown, Zoe Charlton, Mark Bradford, Allan Gordon, Carol Ann Duncan, Leland Swanson, Tess Schwab, Raymond G. Dobard, Wendell Brown, Arthur Monroe, Shirley Woodson Reid, Frank Smith, Jeffreen Hayes, Teresia Bush, Mary Schmidt Campbell
Floyd Coleman, Bennie F. Johnson, Gwendolyn Everett, Richard English, Coni Porter Uzelac, Teresia Bush, Leslie King Hammond, Linda Crocker Simmons, Jeffreen Hayes, Gwendolyn Everett, Sandy Bellamy, Scott Baker, Peter Robinson, Teixeira Nash, Edward Jesse Shaw, Sharon Patton, Edmund B. Gaither, Tritobia Hayes Benjamin, Richard A. Long, Sandra Davis, Alvia Wardlaw, Dewey Mosby, Patricia Hills, Allan Gordon, Raymond Dobard, Kellie Jones, Al Smith, Keith Morrison, Deborah Willis, Lisa Collins, Margo Crawford, Adrienne Childs, Franklin Sirmans, Kristopher J. Cheeves, Imani Perry, Clecia Queiroz, Lou Stovall, Akili Ron Anderson, Yvonne Pickering Carter, Salah Hassan, Juliette Harris, Rebekah Mosby, David C. Driskell
Migrations and the Diaspora: Caribbean and African American Connections
Anacostia Museum and Center for African American History and Culture[18]
Edmund Barry Gaither, Margaret Bernal, Veerle Poupeye, Jerry Philogene, Pamela Franco, Teresia Bush, Evelyn Hawthorne, Mora J. Beauchamp-Byrd, Fritz Racine, Nestor Hernandez, Winston Kennedy, Ben Jones, Francisco Cabral, Michael Auld, Roberta McLeod, Steven C. Newsome, Leslie King-Hammond, Marta Moreno Vega, Dietra Montague, Osvaldo Mesa, Marta Moreno Vega
Floyd W. Coleman, Steven C. Newsome, Roshini Kempadoo, Stephen Marc, Wendel A. White, Jennifer Morris, Constance Porter Uzelac, Tritobia Hayes Benjamin, Alvia Wardlaw, Leslie King-Hammond, Winston Kennedy, Allan Edmunds, Claude Ellliot, Claudia Gibson-Hunter, Arthe Anthony, Camara Holloway, Denise Andrews, Donna M.Wells, Michele L. Simms-Burton, Deborah Willis, Bill Gaskins, Clarissa Sligh, Dawoud Bey, Dennis Callwood, Remy Gastambide, Talib Haqq, Mark Williams, Michael Harris, Kellie Jones, Lisa Gail Collins, Ademola Olugebefola, Mei-Tei-Sing Smith
^ abcdArt, Department of, "Program Booklet: 12th Annual James Porter Colloquium" (2001). 12th Annual James Porter Colloquium. 1. https://dh.howard.edu/portercolloquium_12/1 Note: see introductory paragraph, “ In 1998, the Anacostia Museum and Center for African American History and Culture joined the Howard University Art Department in sponsoring the 9th Annual James A. Porter Colloquium and has subsequently served as a co-sponsor.”
^Event flyer: Howard University College of Fine Arts Announces its Annual Spring Festival March 29 - April 5. On the Spring Festival flyer, "March 31," is the dated listed for the inaugural Porter Colloquium. Moorland Spingarn Research Center. Howard University. 1990.
^Brochure: Howard University, College of Fine Arts, Department of Art. The Inaugural James A. Porter Symposium in African Art. Saturday, March 31, 1990. 10:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. College of Fine Arts, Department of Art. Lulu Vere Childers Hall. Room 3001. Howard University.
Alain Locke, Negro Art: Past and Present (Washington, D.C.: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936)
James Vernon Herring, The Negro in the American Scene: Exhibition of Paintings of Negro Subjects by White American Artists (Washington, D.C.: Howard Univ. Gallery of Art, 1942)
James A. Porter, Modern Negro Art (1943)
David C. Driskell, Two Centuries of Black American Art (1976)
Richard Powell, From the Potomac to the Anacostia: Art & Ideology in the Washington Area (Washington, D.C.: Washington Project for the Arts, 1989)
Constance Porter Uzelac, James A. Porter, Artist and Art Historian: The Memory of the Legacy (Washington, D.C.: Howard Univ. Gallery of Art, 1992)
Deborah Willis, Reflections in Black (2000)
Michael D. Harris, Colored Pictures: Race and Visual Representation (2003)
Lisa Farrington, Creating Their Own Image (2005)
Constance Porter Uzelac, ed., James A. Porter, 1905–1970, From Me to You: The Works of James A. Porter (New York: N’Namdi, 2006)
Lisa Farrington, African-American Art: A Visual and Cultural History (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2017)