Profile: Louise D. Clement-Hoff (1926-2020)
Louise D. Clement-Hoff was an American artist and educator from Philadelphia. Continue reading Profile: Louise D. Clement-Hoff (1926-2020)
Louise D. Clement-Hoff was an American artist and educator from Philadelphia. Continue reading Profile: Louise D. Clement-Hoff (1926-2020)
Burton Clarke is a gay African-American alternative cartoonist. He is known for his contributions to the rise of LGBT comics and his focus on representing gay men of all races and classes in his art, using a mix of realism and fantasy to tackle complex issues such as internalized racism and homophobia. Continue reading Profile: Burton Clarke
Henry Ray Clark was a folk artist born in Bartlett, Texas, and moved to Houston, where he became a criminal with the street name of “The Magnificent Pretty Boy”. After a series of drug-dealing convictions he was found guilty of an assault, his third strike in the Texas Three Strikes Law, which sentenced him to 25 years in Huntsville State Prison. While in prison he developed a characteristic drawing style involving detailed patterning and line work, and was discovered at a prison art show by William Steen, who sold Clark’s work to national and international buyers. Clark died on July 29, 2006, the victim of a robbery and murder in his home. Continue reading Profile: Henry Ray Clark (1936-2006)
Ruth Simmons is an American professor and academic administrator. She is the current President of Prairie View A&M University, a historically black university. Simmons previously served as the 18th president of Brown University, where she was the first African American president of an Ivy League institution. Continue reading Profile: Ruth J. Simmons