Past Exhibits
Artists that have exhibited in the Uumbaji Art Gallery have displayed fashion, themes related to Black Hair, photojournalism, dolls, and, ceramics just to name a few.
Read below for more information about exhibitions that have previously shown in the gallery.
God is Anti-racist (GiA-r), composition no.1 by Amanda D. King
Spring 2022
Artist and social justice advocate Amanda D. King’s acclaimed solo exhibition, God is Anti-racist (GiA-r), composition no.1, consists of screenprints, digital prints, letterpress prints, textile, and found sculpture. The exhibition moves through stages of lamentation, crucifixion, resurrection, and baptism. King’s creative process is informed by Black Liberation Theology, spiritual practice, and cultural mythmaking.
Black Student Movements: Orangeburg, Kent and Jackson State 1968-1970
Spring & Summer 2020
This exhibit seeks to highlight the civil rights struggles and anti-war protests which students engaged in at Orangeburg, Â鶹ÊÓƵ and Jackson State University as well as presenting images from the shootings which occur at each of the three Universities between the years 1968-1970. Curated by Idris Kabir Syed.
(Dis)Mantle, an exhibition of works by Cleveland-based artist Amber N. Ford
Fall 2019
Curated by Dr. Joseph Underwood with assistance from curatorial assistant Jonathan Gonzalez
For more information contact JUnder18@kent.edu
Spirit of the Masquerade: Masks of Western Africa by Orisanmi Kehinde Odesanya (Joyce Morrow)
Fall 2018
Retold African Culture and Fables Reinterpreted into Fashion by Tamika Ellington, Ph.D.
Fall 2016
The Real African: Images from Ghana, a photography exhibit by Vince Robinson
Spring 2017 & 2018
DANCING A LIFE: The Journey of an Afro-Caribbean Woman a photography exhibit by Joann Kilgour Dowdy
Fall 2014