Curatorial Statement

BLACK MATTER is more than an exhibition—it is an act of reclamation, resistance, and reverence. It is a living, evolving archive of contemporary Black artistic voices rooted in Oregon, created in defiance of erasure and in celebration of presence. This traveling exhibition is born from the recognition that Black artists have long been systemically excluded from mainstream institutions, denied the space to simply create without the burden of justification. BLACK MATTER seeks to disrupt those exclusions by offering a platform where Black artists are not asked to perform their pain or define their identity solely in terms of oppression, but rather to speak, make, and dream on their own terms.

In the Western art canon, Blackness is often flattened—our expressions reduced to political symbols, our humanity distilled into narratives of trauma, our artistry filtered through frameworks of whiteness that demand legibility and conformity. In contrast, BLACK MATTER affirms the radical idea that Black artists contain multitudes. Here, the work is allowed to breathe freely. It may echo with rage or with laughter. It may carry the weight of memory or float on abstraction. It may trace lineages through gesture, color, sound, or silence. Whatever its shape, it is enough. Because the artists are enough.

The works in this exhibition are not unified by a singular aesthetic or a fixed thematic lens. Instead, they share a commitment to honesty, complexity, and self-definition. Some pieces may grapple with the legacy of systemic racism in Oregon—a state that wrote exclusion into its very founding. Others may explore intimacy, identity, spirituality, or joy without ever naming race. In this way, BLACK MATTER pushes against the expectation that Black art must always be didactic or reactive. It insists that Black artists, like all artists, have the right to be expansive, to play, to contradict, to heal.

It is about making space where none was offered, and cultivating a cultural landscape in which Black artists can not only survive, but thrive. It asks viewers to meet the work without preconceptions—to listen rather than interpret, to witness rather than consume. It is an invitation to engage with Blackness not as spectacle or singularity, but as a rich, diverse, and living continuum.

This exhibition is also a call to institutions, curators, and communities: to do more than include. To shift power. To center Black voices not only in response to crisis, but as part of the everyday fabric of culture. BLACK MATTER is part of that shift. It is a curatorial practice grounded in care, in justice, and in the belief that art can be a site of transformation.

To honor Black artists is not to tokenize or to tolerate—it is to invest in their sovereignty, their craft, and their capacity to remake the world. BLACK MATTER exists because Black artists matter. Their work matters. Their joy, their grief, their imagination, their contradictions—all of it matters.

This BLACK MATTER, the seventh exhibit in four years, has begun to build more than a community; we are a family of Black artists connecting and caring for each other.  Walking through this gallery now I feel deeply moved and proud of every artist showing here today and every BLACK MATTER artist I’ve had the honor to meet and break bread with over the years. In this exhibition I feel artists that are in love, that are expanding their artistic voices beyond imagined futures. I hear voices of grief and longing, exploration and anticipation. This coming together of voices tells boundless truths worthy of our candid consideration. This BLACK MATTER speaks unapologetically of black life past, present, and future. We, as curators, audiences, and fellow artists, must rise to the responsibility of seeing them fully.

~ Tammy Jo Wilson, 2025.

Learn more about BLACK MATTER here.

BLACK MATTER

ARTISTS