All about photo.com: photo contests, photography exhibitions, galleries, photographers, books, schools and venues.
Win a Solo Exhibition in April 2026!
Win a Solo Exhibition in April 2026!

Spelman College Museum of Fine Art

Share
Spelman College Museum of Fine Art
Spelman College Museum of Fine Art
Atlanta - 350 Spelman Lane, Box 1526 - GA 30314
The Spelman College Museum of Fine Art is the only museum in the nation dedicated exclusively to art by and about women of the African Diaspora. Located on the first floor of the Camille Olivia Hanks Cosby, Ed.D., Academic Center, the Museum has served as a cultural and educational beacon since its founding in 1996. Born out of a vision by Spelman’s arts faculty, the Museum reinforces the belief that visual art is vital to a liberal arts education and instrumental in fostering intellectual and personal growth.

From its inception, the Museum has embodied a commitment to excellence, equity, and innovation. It collaborates closely with academic departments across the college, such as Art & Visual Culture, Women’s Studies, and African Diaspora studies, to embed object-based learning into the curriculum and encourage interdisciplinary exploration. This cross-campus engagement has helped shape the Museum into a vibrant learning environment and a gathering place for dialogue and discovery.

The Museum is known for curating thought-provoking and ambitious exhibitions that elevate the voices of Black women artists. Past exhibitions such as *Bearing Witness*, *Cinema Remixed & Reloaded*, and *Deborah Roberts: The Evolution of Mimi* have drawn national attention for their originality and relevance. These shows not only celebrate artistic excellence but also explore themes of identity, history, and social change.

Dynamic public programs further deepen the impact of the exhibitions. Through gallery talks, panel discussions, and lectures, the Museum invites community members and visitors to engage directly with artists and ideas, enriching the cultural landscape of Atlanta and beyond.

With a growing collection that includes works by emerging and established artists, the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art continues to expand its influence. It stands as a powerful testament to the role of Black women in shaping visual culture and advancing critical conversations through art.

Website

Our printed edition showcases the winners of AAP Magazine call of entries
All About Photo Magazine
Issue #53
Stay up-to-date  with call for entries, deadlines and other news about exhibitions, galleries, publications, & special events.
Advertisement
AAP Magazine #55 Wmen
Win a Solo Exhibition in April
AAP Magazine #55 Wmen
Call for Entries
AAP Magazine #55 Women
Publish your work in our printed magazine and win $1,000 cash prizes

Related Articles

FotoFocus Announces Big Tent Opening of FotoFocus Center
This summer, FotoFocus will expand on their vision and embark on a new chapter with the launch of Big Tent, the inaugural exhibition at the new FotoFocus Center, a 14,700 square foot, purpose-built structure to house photographic exhibitions and year-round programs. Bringing together work by over fifty artists (including An-My Lê, Catherine Opie, Dawoud Bey, Gordon Parks, Justine Kurland, Mitch Epstein, RaMell Ross, Sky Hopinka, Tina Barney and many more), the exhibition (on view May 29-August 22) reflects upon the current state of American democracy while also considering the efficacy of photography to be a catalyst for meaningful change.
 The Queering of Photography by Asa Johannesson
Stills are delighted to announce their spring exhibition: The Queering of Photography by Åsa Johannesson; the artist’s first solo exhibition in Scotland. The Queering of Photography takes place from 1 May – 27 June 2026, Preview: Thursday 30 April, 6–8pm. Åsa Johannesson is an artist working across photography and writing. Over the past two decades she has explored the possibilities of queer visual vocabulary within photographic portraiture – a practice that intertwines queer documentary approaches with performative formalist aesthetics.
Eko: Japan In Two Visual Narratives
From 5 March 2026, The National Maritime Museum in Amsterdam presents the exhibition Ekō – Japan in two visual narratives. Curated as artists conversing across time, the exhibit juxtaposes early photographs of Japan from the museum's own collection, including those by Felice Beato, with the contemporary work it inspired as captured by photographer and visual artist Anaïs López.
Photography and the Black Arts Movement at the Getty
From February 24 to June 14, 2026, the J. Paul Getty Museum presents Photography and the Black Arts Movement, 1955–1985, a landmark exhibition exploring how photographic practices helped shape one of the most influential cultural movements of the twentieth century. Organized by the National Gallery of Art, the exhibition reveals how artists across the African diaspora used images not simply to document history, but to transform it.
MoCP at Fifty: Collecting Through the Decades
The Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago (MoCP) proudly announces its 2026 exhibition, MoCP at Fifty: Collecting Through the Decades, on view from January 22 through May 16, 2026.
Brassaï’s Secret Paris
In 1933, captivated by the nocturnal rhythms and hidden corners of Paris, the Hungarian-born photographer Brassaï published Paris by Night, a landmark photobook that forever transformed how the city of lights was imagined. Through his lens, Brassaï illuminated the city’s shadowed streets, smoky cafés, solitary lovers, and night-time wanderers, creating images that were simultaneously intimate and cinematic. Paris by Night did more than document the city—it defined a modern vision of Paris after dark, capturing a blend of elegance, vulnerability, and intrigue that had never been seen in photography before
Photo Vogue Festival: Women by Women
The PhotoVogue Festival, the first conscious fashion photography festival to bridge ethics and aesthetics, returns to Milan for its tenth anniversary in 2026. From March 1 to 4, during Milan Fashion Week, the festival will take place at the Biblioteca Nazionale Braidense, one of Italy’s most historic and prestigious libraries—a fitting venue for a milestone edition that underscores the festival’s commitment to thoughtful, socially engaged photography.
Ruth Orkin: Women on the Move
Few photographers shaped the visual language of the mid-20th century with the clarity, empathy, and narrative force of Ruth Orkin. Long recognized as a key figure in the rise of American photojournalism, Orkin forged a body of work that placed women—ordinary and extraordinary—at the center of the modern world. Ruth Orkin: Women on the Move, on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from December 12, 2025, through March 29, 2026, revisits this legacy through 21 iconic and intimate photographs made between the 1950s and 1970s.
World Press Photo Exhibition 2025
For the first time in New York City, the World Press Photo Exhibition 2025 opens its doors, presenting the 42 winners of the annual World Press Photo Contest. This year’s selection brings together striking and thought-provoking images that capture the defining issues of our time, offering a window into urgent global stories through the lens of exceptional photographers.
Call for Entries
AAP Magazine #55 Women
Publish your work in our printed magazine and win $1,000 cash prizes