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Edgar Arceneaux
Wangechi Mutu
Paul Mpagi Sepuya

Imagining Black Diasporas: 21st-Century Art and Poetics

December 15, 2024August 3, 2025

Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)

This image illustrates a link to the exhibition titled Edgar Arceneaux<br>Wangechi Mutu<br>Paul Mpagi Sepuya in<br><i>Imagining Black Diasporas: 21st-Century Art and Poetics</i>

Vielmetter Los Angeles congratulates Edgar Arceneaux, Wangechi Mutu, and Paul Mpagi Sepuya on their inclusion in the exhibition Imagining Black Diasporas: 21st-Century Art and Poetics, opening on December 15th at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Curated by Dhyandra Lawson, the exhibition finds aesthetic connections among 60 artists working in Africa, Europe, and the Americas and is on view through August 3, 2025.

The exhibition and its catalogue are among the first to examine nearly a quarter century of production by Black artists. The project debuts new acquisitions for LACMA and expands the Pan-African exhibition canon, historically focused on the Black Atlantic, by showcasing artists working along the Pacific Rim.

Nearly 70 works of painting, sculpture, photography, works on paper, and time-based media are organized into four themes: speech and silence, movement and transformation, imagination, and representation.

Contemporary poets contributed original work to the catalogue, extending the historical use of poetry in Pan-African discourse. Diaspora’s general definition as a displacement from origins excludes all the creativity the term entails. People reinvent their heritage through artistic expressions, transforming diaspora from regional movement into a wellspring of imagination. Through an analysis of Black artists’ aesthetic choices, Imagining Black Diasporas reveals their insights about existence.

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