
The Pulse of a Cultural Revolution: The Harlem Renaissance and Hughes
Join Dr. Cheryl Finley for an insightful talk exploring the Harlem Renaissance and Langston Hughes’ profound influence on shaping the movement’s artistic and cultural legacy. Discover how Hughes’ poetry, vision and voice helped define an era of artistic expression and Black identity.
Presented as part of the Debra and Dennis Scholl Distinguished Speaker Series
Cheryl Finley, Ph.D., is the Walton Endowed Professor and Director of the Atlanta University Center Art History + Curatorial Studies Collective in the Department of Art & Visual Culture at Spelman College. Committed to engaging strategic partners to transform the arts and culture industry, she leads an innovative undergraduate program at the world’s largest historically Black college and university consortium in preparing the next generation of African American museum and visual arts leaders.
A curator and contemporary art critic, Dr. Finley is retired from Cornell University, where she was a tenured professor of Art History for more than 20 years. She is an award-winning author noted for Committed to Memory: The Art of the Slave Ship Icon (Princeton University Press, 2018), the first in-depth study of the most famous image associated with the memory of slavery—a schematic engraving of a packed slave ship hold—and the art, architecture, poetry, and film it has inspired since its creation in Britain in 1788. Her co-authored publications of note include My Soul Has Grown Deep: Black Art from the American South (Yale University Press, 2018), Teenie Harris, Photographer: An American Story (Carnegie Museum of Art, 2011), and Diaspora, Memory, Place: David Hammons, Maria Magdalena Campos- Pons, Pamela Z (Prestel, 2008). A frequent essayist, Dr. Finley’s writing has appeared in numerous academic and popular publications, including Art Forum, Aperture, Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art, American Quarterly, and Small Axe. She serves on the Boards of Creative Capital, the Menil Foundation, Circuit Arts and Island Grown Initiative. She has written extensively on the Harlem Renaissance including artists Lois Mailou Jones and James VanDerZee.
Dr. Finley’s current book project, Black Art Futures, is a social art history of the global Black arts ecosystem, focusing on the relationships among artists, patrons, curators, museums, galleries, art and activism. Her current exhibition, ‘Free as they want to be:’ Artists Committed to Memory, is co-curated with Dr. Deborah Willis. It will open at the Cooper Gallery at Harvard University’s Hutchins Center on February 25, 2025 and travel to Cornell University’s Johnson Museum in fall 2025.
Photo by Gediyon Kifle