New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu


?>

 

Newark Museum of Art Acquires Mashell Black Painting from Akwaaba Gallery

originally published: 08/05/2021


(NEWARK, NJ) -- The Newark Museum of Art acquired Legally Right on August 3, 2021.  It a large-scale piece by abstract painter Mashell Black, who is the first artist to be represented by Akwaaba Gallery in Newark, the city’s only Black-owned commercial gallery.

The acquisition confirms Black’s status as a New Jersey artist whose work has lasting value and importance both locally and internationally, said Tricia Laughlin Bloom, the museum’s Curator of American Art. The painting, which is eight-feet in length, is an exciting addition to the museum’s collection, she said.

Legally Right is a wonderfully expressive piece, very much of this cultural moment but also capturing the sweep of history. There is nothing quite like it in the museum,’’ said Bloom. “We are always looking for new works to activate our galleries and spark conversations about social justice. The exceptionally large scale of this painting and Black's powerful brushwork speak to centuries of conflict and brutality that has taken place in this country because of the gap between legal rights and the basic human rights of Black Americans and other marginalized communities.”

Legally Right was the focal point of Black, the artist’s recent solo show at Akwaaba, curated by gallery co-owner Laura Bonas Palmer.  It featured paintings that center black as a compositional element and explore its power to signify emotions, ideas, people, and Black’s own memories.

Born in a small rural community in Jamaica, Black came to the U.S as a teen, attending school in Tenafly, NJ. He graduated from Syracuse University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2003 and earned an MFA from Rutgers University’s Mason Gross School of the Arts in 2006. He lives in Raritan, NJ with his wife and young son and owns a house painting company. His art studio is based in Newark at Project for Empty Space.




Promote your shows at New Jersey Stage! Click here for info



Black created Legally Right, and many of his other works, by applying thickly textured layers of paint over plywood that he cut and framed himself. “I want to make paintings where the application of the material is so interesting it transcends language, race and politics,’’ he says. 

But his work is also informed by concepts of race and his experiences as a Black man. “When I use the color black to represent Black people, I’m questioning how we are represented in paintings. It’s a commentary as well as an affirmation that Black is beautiful,’’ he says.

There are many reasons to celebrate the museum’s purchase of Black’s work, said Bonas Palmer.  “It’s validation for the city and for the community. And for me as a Black gallery owner, and Mashell as a Black artist.”

Black chose Akwaaba to represent him because of the gallery’s commitment both to artists and Newark’s West Ward, where Palmer and her husband Ray, who co-owns the gallery, have lived for more than 15 years. In 2019, they opened Akwaaba to showcase both local and international artists and have attracted collectors from all over the world to South Orange Avenue, where the gallery is based.

“It’s a perfect place for my work, because I’m talking about Blackness in its rawest form. Whatever that is, it just needs to own itself,’’ said Black. “Laura and Ray went into this community and said it deserves as much beauty and attention as anything else. And that’s what I want to say in my work as well.’’

Newark Museum of Art is located at 49 Washington Street in Newark, New Jersey. Founded in 1909, The Newark Museum of Art is the largest art and education institution in New Jersey and one of the most influential museums in the United States. Its renowned global art collections, supported by significant holdings of science, technology and natural history, rank 12th among North America’s art museums. The Museum is dedicated to artistic excellence, education and community engagement with an overarching commitment to broadening and diversifying arts participation. As it has for over a century, the Museum responds to the evolving needs and interests of the diverse audiences it serves by providing exhibitions, programming and resources designed to improve and enrich people’s lives. 

The Museum also encompasses the 1885 Ballantine House mansion, the Victoria Hall of Science, the Alice and Leonard Dreyfuss Planetarium, the MakerSPACE, the Billy Johnson Auditorium, the Alice Ransom Dreyfuss Memorial Garden, an authentic 1784 Schoolhouse, and the Newark Fire Museum. 




Promote your shows at New Jersey Stage! Click here for info



The Newark Museum of Art, a not-for-profit museum of art and science, receives operating support from the City of Newark, the State of New Jersey, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State (a partner agency of the National Endowment for the Arts), the New Jersey Cultural Trust, the Prudential Foundation, the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, the Victoria Foundation, the Estate of Phyllis and Sanford Bolton, the Wallace Foundation, and other corporations, foundations, and individuals. Funds for acquisitions and activities other than operations are provided by members and other contributors. 

FEATURED EVENTS

ART | COMEDY | DANCE | FILM | MUSIC | THEATRE | COMMUNITY

To narrow results by date range, categories,
or region of New Jersey
click here for our advanced search.


The

The MAC players at the Middletown Arts Center present "Hairspray"

Friday, July 18, 2025 @ 7:00pm
Middletown Arts Center
36 Church Street, Middletown, NJ 07748




 

The

The Mallard

Friday, July 18, 2025 @ 7:30pm
Premiere Stages - Bauer Boucher Theatre Center
1000 Morris Avenue, Union, NJ 07083



Good

Good Riddance; A Gnarly Murder Mystery Dinner, Dude!

Friday, July 18, 2025 @ 6:00pm
Carteret Performing Arts Center
46 Washington Ave, Carteret, NJ 07008



The

The Wizard of Oz

Friday, July 18, 2025 @ 7:30pm
Algonquin Arts Theatre
60 Abe Voorhees, Manasquan, NJ 08736



Salsa

Salsa Night

Friday, July 18, 2025 @ 7:30pm
State Theatre Studio
15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901




 

EVENT PREVIEWS

Trenton

Trenton City Museum to Hold Two Ellarslie Open Talks In August

(TRENTON, NJ) -- Ellarslie Open 42, the annual juried exhibition on view in Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie Mansion, invites the public to gallery talks Sunday, August 3 and Saturday, August 16, 2025. Admission for each talk is: $15/general public; $10/Trenton Museum Society members; $5/all EO42 entrants. Admission includes Continental breakfast fare.



Luke

Luke Jerram's Museum of the Moon to orbit Rahway in October

(RAHWAY, NJ) -- Museum of the Moon, a touring artwork by U.K. artist Luke Jerram, will be presented inside the majestic Union County Performing Arts Center (UCPAC) in October 2025. This is the first time Museum of the Moon will be presented in New Jersey and one of a handful of times it has been exhibited on the East Coast in the United States.



Sandy

Sandy Bennett Art Gallery at bergenPAC presents Works by Ellen Reinkraut

(ENGLEWOOD, NJ) -- The Sandy Bennett Art Gallery at bergenPAC presents New Jersey's esteemed contemporary artist, Ellen Reinkraut with "Layered Contemporary Mixed Media." The exhibit showcases extraordinary unique layered art inspired by the mystical element of life. It is on display through August 2025.



Kirby

Kirby & Delia: "All Rise"

The murals in the Brennan Courthouse (583 Newark Avenue) aren't tough to decipher. There are pilgrims, there are patriots, and there is Hudson County history rendered in the boldest strokes. Look to the underside of the building's grand dome and you'll find signs of the Zodiac; look to the walls for "The Coming of the English," a piece by Howard Pyle that depicts exactly what its title suggests that it will. This feels appropriate for the town's most handsome building — one with an interior reminiscent of classic civic architecture in Trenton and D.C. and the decorated Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, and named after a jurist whose written decisions on the Supreme Court were distinguished by their clarity. William Brennan believed in the salutary effects of direct and comprehensible language. For him, the law was no place for abstraction.



Gallery

Gallery at HACPAC presents Colorblind, a solo exhibition of paintings by Val DeAppolonio

(HACKENSACK, NJ) -- The Ruth Bauer Neustadter Gallery at Hackensack Performing Arts Center (HACPAC) presents Colorblind, a solo exhibition of paintings by Val DeAppolonio from July 7 through August 29, 2025. Val is a self-taught, colorblind artist from Northern NJ whose bold abstracts pulse with energy and motion.