
How Two New Art Exhibitions Are Spotlighting Black Queer History
Two new art exhibitions are spotlighting Black queer history amid intensifying government censorship and threats to federal arts funding. “In the Life: Black Queerness—Looking Back, Moving Forward” at the Carr Center in Detroit presents an 80-year survey of Black queer culture, opening with LeRoy Foster’s 1945 self-portrait “Martini Marti” and featuring works by Zanele Muholi, April Bey, and Pamela Sneed. Co-curated by Patrick Burton and Wayne Northcross, the show is produced by Mighty Real/Queer Detroit and will be part of the Detroit Queer Biennial in June 2026. A second exhibition, “The Gay Harlem Renaissance,” runs from October 10 through March at the New York Historical Museum in Manhattan, curated by Allison Robinson, highlighting queer contributions to the Harlem Renaissance through artifacts, artworks, and archival materials.

