Learn, Create, Educate

In support of black, indigenous, and people of color, we are asking the public to educate themselves about BIPOC artists and to share what they learned through art.

LEARN

Research a BIPOC artist 

CREATE

Create work in response to the artist’s work and share it

EDUCATE

Share the artist’s name, one example of their work, & one thing you learned about the artist

Community Gallery

Lola Alvarez Bravo – (Mexican, 1907-1993)

 

Sue Clark’s fine art photography submission:  “Ruben of Mexico”

Lola Alvarez Bravo is recognized as Mexico’s first successful female fine arts photographer. Ms. Bravo was well-known for her candid portrayals of Mexican subjects. The intention of her photography was to reveal the deeper meaning of  the culture of Mexico. Her career arc included being  named head of the photography department at  Mexico’s National Institute for Fine Arts, which was a trailblazing position for a woman at that time. She had many art friends, including Paul Strand, Diego Rivera and  Frida Kahlo. In fact, in 1953, Lola’s Mexico City gallery sponsored Frida Kahlo’s first and only solo exhibition in Mexico in Frida’s lifetime. Ms. Bravo’s archive was bequeathed to the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona in 1994 upon her death. Her images hang in the permanent collections of the Museum of Fine Art, Houston, and the Museum of Modern Art in NYC. 

We will release artwork and examples received each week on our website and social media platforms. 

All works should be emailed to springstreetgallerylist@gmail.com
In your email please include:

  • your name
  • the name of the artist you researched
  • a jpg or mp4 of their work including title
  • a jpg or mp4 of your work including title, medium, & size
  • a short synopsis of what you learned

Please email springstreetgallerylist@gmail.com with any submission questions.

All mediums welcome.

A selection of artworks will be placed in an exhibition on SSG’s walls in the future. If selected, the gallery will be in contact with the chosen artists.

“Enaction is the idea that organisms create their own experience through their actions. Organisms are not passive receivers of input from the environment, but are actors in the environment such that what they experience is shaped by how they act.” – Edwin Hutchins