Reframing Blackness, Alayo Akinkugbe
Reframing Blackness, Alayo Akinkugbe
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Reframing Blackness
What’s Black about “History of Art”?

Author: Alayo Akinkugbe

Narrator: Alayo Akinkugbe

Unabridged: 3 hr 57 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/10/2025


Synopsis

Brought to you by Penguin.

Since the inception of mainstream art history, Blackness has been distinctly ignored.

In Reframing Blackness, art historian and founder of @ABlackHistoryOfArt, Alayo Akinkugbe challenges this void.

Exploring the presentation of Black figures in Western art, Blackness in museums, Blackness in feminist art movements, as well as Blackness in the curriculum, Alayo unveils an overlooked but integral part of our collective art history.

Refreshing and accessible, this promises to start a much-needed conversation in culture and education.

© Alayo Akinkugbe 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

Reviews

Goodreads review by Rae on November 29, 2025

A brilliantly written manifesto for inclusion, positive change, and integration. Concise, succinct, informative, and the next book you need to read on Art if you've been reading the classic texts.......more

Goodreads review by kara on August 07, 2025

I found the book very interesting and enjoyable to read. Akinkugbe critiques the Eurocentric canon while highlighting the work of Black artists, curators, and thinkers. I found myself contrasting my own university experiences (at CU Boulder and ASU) in the US to that experienced by the author in the......more

Goodreads review by Amy on September 30, 2025

It was beyond enlightening, i felt like i was inside of a museum. looking up every art piece and knowing so much history behind it now left me so speechless. Feminist theory is everything. I will say, I wish queerness could have been included! 😭 This book should be a requirement.......more

Goodreads review by Malcolm on November 07, 2025

I’m often surprised when folks are surprised that art history’s whiteness is an issue; after all, there’s that widespread view that non-European worlds did not have art in the way Europe did/does – arts and crafts, perhaps, but not Art – a proper noun. Yet its defensive whiteness is there in the tit......more

Goodreads review by phebe on September 09, 2025

should be required reading!! I started uni only a few years after Akinkugbe did, reading the same subject, but at the Other university (although cambridge is always “the other one” in my mind). we share some academic interests so parts of it felt familiar to me, but there were still some new discove......more


Quotes

A sparkling debut. Bold, eloquent, personal and clear-eyed, Alayo Akinkugbe is a major new voice in writing about art, museums and culture. Reframing Blackness shows us how addressing absences and erasures can be about so much more than just filling the gaps. This book is a manifesto, a manual and a toolkit all at once, focused on the urgent tasks of reimagining the canon, transforming the curriculum, and bringing art history into the 21st century. It will shift your frames of reference, expand your canvas, and give you hope for the future — changing how you look at art while also making you look again at your ways of seeing

Reframing Blackness is a testament to the necessity and vital importance of taking an active role in not only curating knowledge but challenging systems of knowing that have shaped our world view thus far.

Alayo Akinkugbe illustrates exactly how structural education should never wholly substitute the learning that we must continue to do into adulthood. To explore a history of Black communities across centuries of art is a love letter to the practice, a gift of knowledge and an ode to those who’s creative expressions give us much to be inspired by today.

To curate knowledge, is to understand and know ourselves better in a world we inherited, and a world that we contribute to in our short time here

By engaging in dialogue with the curators of recent pivotal exhibitions, Akinkugbe demonstrates a shared commitment to uncovering what has been overlooked – and a commitment to deepening the discourse around blackness ... The book raises key questions that black cultural producers have grappled with in the UK since the 1960s ... Akinkugbe guides us closer to a vision that does not require black people to reinsert ourselves, but insists on our resolute presence – both then and now. The Conversation