Exhibition Space 3401 W. 43rd Place
Rahim Fortune: Between a Memory and Me presents the first solo exhibition in Los Angeles of a photographer whose work moves between family history, landscape and the shifting language of Black and Indigenous identity. On view from April 18 to September 5, 2026 at Art + Practice, the exhibition brings together black-and-white images from Fortune’s
Hardtack project, new color photographs made in response to the Texas African American Photography Archive, and a short film that lingers over rural roads, fields and quiet details in the American South.
Born in Austin and raised in the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma, Fortune has built a practice around the ties between people and place. His photographs do not separate portraiture from landscape. A face, a field, a roadside or a close crop of a hand often carry the same amount of narrative weight. That approach gives the work an unusual steadiness. The images feel personal without becoming private, and documentary without flattening what they show.
The new color work adds another layer to a project already concerned with memory and inheritance. Commissioned by Aperture and Documentary Arts, the photographs respond to an archival record shaped by Black Texans and their communities, placing Fortune’s contemporary vision in conversation with earlier forms of local photographic history. The short film deepens that exchange, moving slowly through places where history is carried less by monument than by repetition, weather and use.
Art + Practice’s Leimert Park setting sharpens the exhibition’s focus on community and cultural continuity. As part of the CAAM at A+P collaboration, the show sits within a broader institutional effort to present Black art in a neighborhood long associated with creative exchange and public life. Fortune’s work fits that context well. It treats the American South not as a backdrop for nostalgia, but as a living archive of labor, kinship and belonging.
Between a Memory and Me shows how photographically documenting a place can also mean testing how that place remains present in the people who leave it, return to it or carry it forward.
Image:
Rahim Fortune, Prairie View Homecoming Parade, Prairie View, Texas, 2024. Archival pigment
print, 30 x 40 in. © Rahim Fortune, courtesy Sasha Wolf Projects, New York