Hal Foster and Okwui Enwezor |
Lucia Dogbeh-Onovoh, with Johannes and Sophie Lehmann |
Lawyer and Art Collector David Ross with Professor Simon Ottenberg |
Adedoyin Teriba and Okwui Enwezor |
Susan Inglett and art collector/curator Holly Ross |
Marcia and Donna Sesee |
Carol Barnard Ottenberg and David Ross |
Simon Ottenberg and Johannes Lehman (and Sophia, center) of Cornell University |
Simon Ottenberg and Marcia |
Artist Ard Berge, Holly and David Ross, and Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Alisa LaGamma |
Marcia with Steven Nettles and Ellen Lagow-Nettles of Art Now Management |
Molly Nettles with Ngozi and Arinze Okeke-Agulu |
Sherman Edmiston of Essie Green Galleries (center) |
Hal Foster (left), Kristen Windmuller-Luna (center) and Joseph Luna (right) |
Lucia Dogbeh-Onovoh, Marcia with Ngozi, Okwui Enwezor and Hal Foster |
Susan Inglett and Gary Schneider, Director of Education @ Monclair Museum of Art |
Kristen Windmuller-Luna and Joseph Luna |
Lucia Dogbeh and Okwui Enwezor |
Marcia, Ngozi and independent curator Tumelo Mosaka |
Perrin Lathrop of Newark Museum and Simon Ottenberg |
2 comments:
Hello,
There's a white woman wearing African garb. I'm wondering, is this okay? Do you have an opinion on women who are not African, wearing traditional African clothing? She just seems to be white and I don't know what to feel about it. It feels wrong.
Thanks,
Shirley
Shirley,
I cannot find the "African garb" you are talking about in any of the pictures. And I would know African traditional fashion when I see one. Even so, there is absolutely nothing wrong with anyone wearing any ordinary dress of his/her choice, wherever such dress comes from. Fashion police should only exist on entertainment TV.
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