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Harlem Renaissance art for the homes that carry the music with them. Painted by a Black artist in the lineage of Aaron Douglas and Jacob Lawrence, reproduced on museum-grade giclée canvas built to last a hundred years. Jazz horns, blues clubs, brownstones at dusk, the era when Black creativity rewrote the country. Made by hand in a Black-owned studio, made for the walls that already know the songs.
Blues Wall Art and Juke Joint Scenes
Blues wall art rooted in Mississippi front porches and Chicago basement clubs. The guitar bent low, the woman holding the note, the smoke and the sweat and the prayer of it. We paint the blues the way our grandparents played it, slow, honest, unhurried. Each canvas reproduced with archival inks on cotton canvas, the kind of work that holds its color for a hundred years.
Jazz Wall Art and Black Music Art
Jazz wall art for the rooms where the record player still earns its keep. Trumpet players in three-piece suits, Black music art that remembers Coltrane, Billie, Dizzy, Nina. Painted in the tradition Aaron Douglas opened up, figures in silhouette against deep blues and ochres. Reproduced on museum-grade canvas. Ready to hang the day it arrives, sized big enough to anchor a sectional or stretch above a console.
Hip Hop Wall Art and Hip Hop Posters
Hip hop wall art and hip hop posters for the heads who remember the boom bap. Boomboxes, cyphers, subway cars tagged in spray, the kids who turned the Bronx into a global language. Graffiti wall art canvas with the same reverence we bring to jazz, because it is jazz, rewritten. Painted by hand in a Black-owned studio, reproduced on archival cotton canvas, sized for the brownstone or the loft.
New Orleans Jazz Street Scenes
New Orleans jazz street scenes painted from memory and from love. Second-line parades on Frenchmen, brass bands turning a Tuesday into a sermon, the women in white waving handkerchiefs, the boys keeping time on tubas almost taller than they are. Reproduced on giclée canvas in saturated golds and reds and greens, the colors the city wears every day.
Black History Art and Harlem Era Portraits
Black history art that names the names. Zora at her typewriter, Langston at the window, Bessie holding the room, the Harlem of 1925 when every block was a manifesto. Portraiture in the lineage of Jacob Lawrence and Elizabeth Catlett, painted by hand, reproduced on archival canvas. The kind of work that turns a hallway into a syllabus and a living room into a record of who we have always been.
