Photos, Paintings, Playlists, Sculptures: Three Must-See Shows at Houston Museum of African American Culture

Photos, Paintings, Playlists, Sculptures: Three Must-See Shows at Houston Museum of African American Culture

An untitled 1975 photo by Michael Abramson

AT THE TOP of 2024, with Black History Month coming to a close and Women’s History Month just around the corner, the Houston Museum of African American Culture has not one, not two, but three exhibitions on view through March 30: Bert Long, Jr. Spring Survey Exhibition and Pervs, Peppers, and the High Chaparral: Michael Abramson’s Chicago South Side Photographs, both curated by HMAAC chief curator Christopher Blay, and One Nation, One Groove: African American Music as the s Story of American Music, curated by HMAAC CEO John Guess, Jr.


Located down the street from Holocaust Museum Houston and Asia Society Houston, HMAAC continues to hit it out of the park with exhibitions and programming that recognize the contributions of Black artists to American culture and the history of art, while reinforcing the modern adage, “Every month is Black History Month.”

The Bert Long, Jr. Spring Survey Exhibition is open annually to Houston-area emerging artists. This year, there are nine artists on view, and one of the artists will be chosen for the 2024 Bert Long, Jr. Prize which includes a $3,000 cash award and a summer solo exhibition in the Bert Long, Jr. Gallery. The quality of all of the artwork in this year’s survey is exceptional; from Ann Johnson’s intaglio prints on raw cotton; to Morgan Grigsby’s dramatic and sensual oil-on-canvas portrait “Bottle Girl;” to Christopher Paul’s Gullah-inspired sound, video, and sculpture installation “Great Was the Ecstasy.” Photography, lithography, and other mixed media are also represented in this wide-ranging survey.

Shavon Morris's 'Transfiguration,' collage on canvas, 2024

Pervs, Peppers, and the High Chaparral were three Black nightclubs located on Chicago’s South Side in the 1970s where photographer Michael Abramson, a white man, embedded himself with a Leica flash camera to document the scene. Dressed to the nines, the working-class crowds danced, smoked, and smooched to the sounds of underground funk and early disco. “Imagine Ernie Barnes’ Sugar Shack painting, but as photographs,” is how Blay describes this sexy collection of nocturnal craziness. “The result is an invaluable legacy of Black joy expressed in images of people in Black and queer spaces.”

Complementing Abramson’s photos, and taking its name from the classic 1978 song by Funkadelic, One Nation, One Groove explores the history of African American music — with nods to Houston’s own Archie Bell and Johnny Nash — as an expression of the human condition and a driving force for social change. The exhibition includes reprinted archival images of performances, advertisements, posters, and signs from several eras, including images of Houston’s own Arnett Cobb and Milt Larkin, as well as vinyl records, barbershop chairs, and hip-hop and jazz videos. QR codes throughout the installation lead to playlists of music referenced in the show.

Art + Entertainment
Fall Philanthropy Report: Children’s Assessment Center Touts ‘Healing’ for Child Abuse Victims

What is your mission? The Children’s Assessment Center (The CAC) provides healing services to over 6,300 child sexual abuse victims and their families each year. We offer forensic interviewing, family advocacy, mental health services, medical care, and court services at no cost. We facilitate community outreach and prevention training to raise awareness about child abuse in our community and how to keep children safe. Last year, we provided prevention training to over 35,000 community members, including 23,500 children in schools.

Keep Reading Show less

Michelle and Jonathan Zadok (photo by Jacob Power)

WITH A COWBOY theme and terrific country band — think big hats and big hearts, said organizers — the Crime Stoppers gala was a huge hit and moving evening.

Keep Reading Show less

Breanna Blankenship, Nicholas Stuart, Zsavon Butler, Outspoken Bean

SUPPORTERS OF THE Houston Arts Alliance pulled inspiration from global art, fashion and culture for a spectacular gala at the Hobby Center. “The World’s Stage” gala, chaired by Zsavon Butler and Nicholas Stuart, raised $325,000 to benefit the Houston Arts Alliance’s public-art and artist resiliency initiatives.

Keep Reading Show less
Parties