Skip to main content

Black Art Histories Montreal Before the Internet

26 November 2025, 2:00pm
Concordia University, EV 3-711

Leon Llewellyn, Interior view of Quebec Black Weeks Festival art  exhibition, Mezzanine level of Hall building, Sir George Williams  University, 1974 Leon Llewellyn, "Interior view of Quebec Black Weeks Festival art exhibition, Mezzanine level of Hall building, Sir George Williams University," 1974. Fonds Leon Llewelyn-F032/A Community organizations and events, Vanier Library, Special Collections.

The Black Art Histories Montreal Group researches, documents, and preserves the contributions of Black Montreal visual artists before the Internet became widely accessible by collecting materials, recording oral histories, and building a digital archive with the goal of creating a comprehensive archive and a permanent space for curation, preservation, and research of Black Canadian art histories in the city. Following a visual survey of their research findings to date, members of the group will have a public conversation with Dr. Joana Joachim, Department of Art History at Concordia University.

Black Art Histories Montreal (BAHM) is a collective predominantly composed of anglophone and francophone members of Montreal’s Black communities, including researchers, curators, artists, writers, educators, and independent scholars of different cultural backgrounds. The working group is intergenerational and of diverse professional and sociocultural backgrounds, thus bridging gaps between academic institutions and community circles. They share a common interest and passion for the recuperation, preservation, recognition, and dissemination of the art and cultural legacies of Black visual artists who were and are active in Tiohtià:ke/Mooniyang/Montréal. Through educational programming and outreach, they aim to ensure that the stories, achievements, and creative visions of Black visual artists in Canada are honoured and remain accessible for generations to come. Their vision is to manifest, preserve, and celebrate Black art in Montreal, radically transforming our shared cultural landscape by recognizing the achievements of Black visual artists, stimulating scholarship, and fostering collaboration across communities.

Back to top

© Concordia University