As Kwanzaa approaches, the African Diaspora Art Museum of Atlanta is positioning the seven-day cultural observance not as a standalone holiday program, but as a lens through which visitors can understand the museum’s mission, exhibitions and long-term vision.
At ADAMA, Kwanzaa’s principles — particularly Kujichagulia, or self-determination — inform how the institution presents African diaspora art and how it imagines its future in Atlanta’s cultural landscape.
Art as self-definition
That framework is visible throughout “Brother, Brother: The Interior Lives of Black Men,” a 30-work exhibition curated by Fahamu Pecou, ADAMA’s director. The show draws exclusively from the personal collection of actor CCH Pounder, whose decades-long commitment to collecting African diaspora art has resulted in holdings expansive enough to support multiple thematic exhibitions. Pieces range from monumental paintings that confront viewers head-on to intimate works rendered in fiber, drum surfaces and small-scale formats. Together, they challenge inherited assumptions about how Black men are expected to appear, behave or be read.
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