Exhibition Space 3401 W. 43rd Place
Kinship & Community: Selections from the Texas African American Photography Archive brings forward a visual record of Black life in eastern Texas that extends from 1944 to 1984. On view at Art + Practice through September 5, 2026, the exhibition gathers photographs made in studios and communities across urban neighborhoods and rural towns, where local photographers documented the people, rituals and public occasions that shaped everyday life.
The images carry the weight of a form of photography that has often gone unrecognized. In small towns across the country, studio photographers once served as chroniclers of family histories, church events, parades, school portraits and civic gatherings. In this exhibition, that role becomes especially clear. The photographs do not simply preserve faces and ceremonies; they show how Black communities in Texas built identity, continuity and visibility in the midst of segregation and rapid social change.
Drawn from the Texas African American Photography Archive, the works offer a view of life across some of the most consequential decades of the twentieth century. Rodeos, political meetings, parties and church scenes appear alongside formal portraits and school photographs, creating a broad account of daily experience rather than a single historical narrative. That range gives the exhibition its force. It presents Black life not as a marginal note to American history, but as a sustained and self-defined world of kinship and public culture.
The exhibition is organized by the Center for Photography at Woodstock and curated by Nicole R. Fleetwood, with research assistance from Eva Cilman and Anisa Jackson. Presented as part of CAAM at A+P, a five-year collaboration between the California African American Museum and Art + Practice, the show places archival photography in a public setting where its social meaning is easy to grasp and hard to ignore.
Kinship & Community is a reminder that local photography can carry national history. These pictures hold not just memory, but the structure of a community seeing itself clearly.
Image:
Rodney Evans, Photography students, Texas Southern University, Houston, Texas, 1961.
Gelatin silver print. Courtesy Documentary Arts/Texas African American Photography Archive