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    doing martin proud

    Groundbreaking showcase of centuries-old Black art makes milestone stop at Holocaust Museum Houston

    Craig D. Lindsey
    Jan 12, 2024 | 2:45 pm

    As the world pauses to honor the life and legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr., the work of a widely impactful – but lesser known — Black family gets a major showcase in Houston.

    Kinsey African American Art & History Collection

    Image courtesy of the Kinsey African American Art & History Collection

    Holocaust Museum Houston will showcase The Kinsey African American Art & History Collection, now through June. Widely acclaimed and groundbreaking, the exhibition celebrating the achievements and contributions of Black Americans from 1595 to present day.

    Considered one of the most comprehensive surveys of African American history and culture outside of the Smithsonian Institution, the exhibition will feature over 100 of the shared treasures amassed by art collectors Bernard and Shirley Kinsey during their five decades of marriage. In total, the couple collected more than 1,000 works.

    Houston marks the 40th show for the exhibit, which has been seen by more than 16 million people nationwide. The Houston stop features 20 percent of never-been-seen paintings and sculptures, photographs, rare books, letters, manuscripts, and more.

    Prolific preservationists battling an ugly myth

    Prolific and ahead of their time, the Kinseys, a Black couple, vowed to travel to 100 countries when they wed in 1967. As they began collecting to mark each journey, their collection became a repository for African American intellectual, historical, and artistic works.

    Soon, the Kinseys realized that they knew little of their own history, largely due to the fact that for centuries, contributions made by African Americans in industry, art, science and politics have been omitted from history books.

    To that end, a primary theme for this exhibit is to battle that "Myth of Absence," as they call it. The family — Bernard, Shirley, and son Khalil — believe their collection helps give a well-rounded look at the African American experience and the integral roles African Americans played in building this country, providing new perspectives on chapters of the nation’s history which have been ignored.

    “The Kinsey Collection strives to give our ancestors a voice, a name and a personality, enabling the viewer to understand the challenges, obstacles, triumphs, accomplishments and extraordinary sacrifice of African Americans in building this country,” Bernard Kinsey noted in a statement.

    “This is an American story, and most people only know a fraction of it,” Khalil Kinsey, who, serves as general manager and chief curator for the collection and exhibitions, added.

    From slave ships to crowning achievements and moments

    Representing the intersection between art and history, the exhibition covers the lives, accomplishments and artistry of African Americans, from the 16th century through the years of slavery and emancipation to the civil rights movement and today. Important objects include bills of sale, advertisements, letters, and legal papers documenting the slave trade; hand-colored tintypes from the Civil War era; art and literature from the Harlem Renaissance; and items spotlighting key moments in the civil rights movement, including the Woolworth store boycotts and the 1963 March on Washington.

    A history of African Americans in art is charted through works by numerous celebrated artists, including Charles Alston, Richard Barthé, Bisa Butler, Elizabeth Catlett, Alma Thomas, Laura Wheeler Waring, Houston’s own Ava Cosey and many more.

    Triumph over trauma

    The Kinsey Collection has been cited in three national awards, including the National Medal for Museum and Library Service. Garnering national media attention and experienced by more than 16 million people, the groundbreaking exhibition has toured more than 35 cities in the U.S. and internationally, including the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History, The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, EPCOT Walt Disney World, the University of Hong Kong Museum and Gallery, and California’s SoFi Stadium.

    “The Kinsey Collection highlights the resilience of African Americans despite a long history of discrimination and trauma,” said Alex Hampton, HMH’s changing exhibitions manager, in press materials. “It also shows the vital contributions Black people have made to American society despite this history.

    As a Holocaust and Human Rights museum, we want our exhibitions to bring communities together by illuminating the similarities in our histories while also keeping in mind the differences.”

    -----

    The Kinsey African American Art & History Collection will run through Sunday, June 23 in the Josef and Edith Mincberg Gallery of the Holocaust Museum Houston (5401 Caroline St.). For information on schedules, tickets, and free events, visit the HMH website.

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    Arts News

    Houston arts organization spins up a new record label for creative works

    Jef Rouner
    Jan 27, 2026 | 2:30 pm
    Two CD copies of Tyshawn Sorey's Monochromatic Light (Afterlife)
    Photo courtesy of DACAMERA Editions
    DACAMERA's unique musical contribution to Houston now comes in LP form.

    For more than three decades, Houston arts and music non-profit DaCamera has brought innovative and unique jazz and chamber music performances to the city. Now, they are launching their own record label called DaCamera Editions, starting with TyShawn Sorey's Monochromatic Light (Afterlife) releasing on January 30.

    Since 1987, DaCamera has been a nationally-celebrated curator, commissioner, and presenter of modern works that often fly under the mainstream radar. With the establishment of an in-house record label, the music they are known for becomes more widely available to audiences.

    "Following the thrilling experience of commissioning, performing, and recording Monochromatic Light (Afterlife), we saw an opportunity to launch our own label," DaCamera artistic director Sarah Rothenberg said in a statement. "DaCamera Editions will enable us to share our distinctive, curated mix of new music, classical repertoire, and jazz in a way that emphasizes connections to art, literature and the world in which we live, all under the DaCamera umbrella."

    Monochromatic Light (Afterlife) is the perfect album to herald a new Houston record label. The meditative piece was a joint commission from DaCamera and the Rothko Chapel to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the renowned Houston landmark. Featuring soloists Davóne Tines (bass-baritone), Kim Kashkashian (viola), Sarah Rothenberg (piano/celesta), Steven Schick (percussion), and the Houston Chamber Choir, the 75-minute work was a critical hit when it premiered in 2022. It built on a previous work, Morton Feldman's Rothko Chapel, which debuted at the site in 1972. Sorey composed a bass-baritone part for Tines and expanded the keyboard role by adding piano. As part of the performance, Tines sings lines from the spiritual "I Feel Like a Motherless Child."

    Both The New York Times and The New Yorker named the premiere of Monochromatic Light (Afterlife) as a top 10 classical performance of 2022. It was also a Finalist for the 2023 Pulitzer Prize in Music.

    The album will be released on both CD and digital formats. Pre-orders are available at DaCameraEditions.com.

    Future planned releases include Rothenberg's In Darkness and Light (May 2026), a piano album inspired by the anxiety of COVID and featuring Vijay Iyer’s eloquent personal memorial "For My Father;" and Tyshawn Sorey’s solo piano work For Julius Eastman, a tribute to the minimalist composer and activist whose work has undergone a 21st Century renaissance since his death in relative obscurity in 1990.

    "DaCamera Editions will enable us to share our distinctive, curated mix of new music, classical repertoire, and jazz in a way that emphasizes connections to art, literature and the world in which we live,” Rothenberg said.

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