User : PigeonChickenFish/Article Suggestions
Council for Advancement of Negroes in Architecture (NACA)
Robert Lester Buffins (1892–1981), architect, educated at Howard University [1]
Ralph Victor Cook (1875–1949), architect[1] [2]
William Jefferson Decatur (1874–unknown), architect from Atlanta, Georgia[1]
Charles Edgar Dickinson (1908–1964), the first Black member of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA)[1]
Clyde Martin Drayton (1915–1983), architect from Southern Pines , North Carolina[1] [3]
DeWitt Sanford Dykes Sr. (1903–1991), architect and minister[1] [4] [5]
Gaston Alonzo Edwards (1875–1943), architect, taught at Shaw University in Raleigh[1] [6]
Robert Lionel Fields (1918–1985), architect from Charleston, South Carolina[1]
Wade Alston Ford (1886–1949), architect from Columbia, South Carolina[1]
Mario Girona (1924–2008), Cuban architect, has article in other languages
Clinton Stevens Harris (1900–1992), architect from Queens, New York[1]
Joseph E. Hill (unknown–1892), architect, teacher; from Philadelphia[1]
James Edward Hutchins (1890–1970), architect from Blakely , Georgia; active in Jacksonville, Florida[1]
Percy Costa Ifill (1913–1973), architect; from Harlem[1]
Willie Edward Jenkins (1923–1988), (W. Edward Jenkins ), architect practicing in North Carolina[1]
Harvey Nathaniel Johnson Sr. (1892–1973), architect from Virginia[1]
Arthur Edward Lankford (1879–1908), architect from Potosi, Missouri[1]
Henry Lewis Livas (1912–1979), architect, educator; active in Norfolk, Virginia[1]
Joseph Lincoln Parker (1898–1959), "architectural engineer associated with large public transportation projects in New York"[1]
Edward Lyons Pryce (1914–), landscape architect, educated at Tuskegee Institute (B.S. 1937), Ohio State University (B.Land.Arch.1948).[1] [7]
Leon Andrew Ransom Jr. (1929–1971), architect from Columbus, Ohio
Lawrence Reese (1865–1915), self taught architect from Bennetsville in Marlboro County , South Carolina[1] [8]
Francis Jefferson Roberson (1862–1944), architect from Saint Louis, Missouri; designed St. Peter's African Methodist Episcopal Church in Minneapolis[1]
Walter Lenox Roberts Jr. (1908–1982), architect, Modernist designs; from Cambridge, Massachusetts[1]
Edward Eyestone Young (1870–1934), American architect best known for designing San Francisco's Pacific Heights homes in the early 1900s
Art historians, curators
edit
Black history / African American history
edit
African Americans in Louisiana ; needs expansion
William Thomas Amiger (c. 1870–1929), American college president, Baptist minister, educator
William Beckham (born 1866–?), American Baptist minister, community leader
Othello Burghardt (c. 1791–1872; Othello Burget ), grandfather of a great many notable African Americans (including W. E. B. Du Bois ), lived in Great Barrington, Massachusetts
Lloyd Miller Cooke (1916–2001), (Draft:Lloyd Miller Cooke ) noted African American industrial chemist and researcher, son of architect William Wilson Cooke (1871–1949)[9] [10] [1]
William Abraham Creditt (1864–1921) American minister, university founder, president of the New England Baptist Convention
Chester Bromily Hoke (1847–1913; also known as Bromley Hoke , Bromily Hoke , Chester “Bromley” Hoke ), "mulatto", served in the 54th Massachusetts Infantry , Co. G during the American Civil War; lived at Hoke House in Canajoharie, New York [11] [12] [13]
John Edward Perry , or J. Edward Perry ; J. Edward Perry [Wikidata ] , physician
Peter Quire (Draft:Peter Quire ), Black leader and founder of St. John's Episcopal Church in Newport, Rhode Island[14] [15]
Mary Ann Spencer Smith (1917–2001; Draft:Mary Ann Spencer Smith ), postal worker, real estate broker, and civil rights activist - she worked to eliminate redlining in San Jose, California[16]
Isreal Pinkney Stanback , businessman and philanthropist from Columbia, South Carolina
Obadiah Summers (1844–1896), minister, and served as the California State Legislature as its first black chaplain.
Wakefield Institute , former African-American private college in New Iberia, Louisiana; closed in 1874
Charles Thomas Walker (1858–1921) American Baptist minister, civic leader
Robinson Judson Wilbur Sr. (1904 – c. 1986), businessman, realtor, and civic leader in Pleasantville, Texas ; first African-American mortgage company in Texas approved by the FHA[17]
West Broad Street School former school in Athens, Georgia; first black school in the state[18]
Craftspeople, visual artists, photographers
edit
Movements and groups
edit
Jen Bervin , visual artist and poet, from Black Mountain School
Rachid Bouhamidi (born 1981), American painter, of French and Moroccan heritage
Helen Breger (1918–2013), Austrian-born American printmaker, illustrator, educator
Natalia Castañeda Arbelaez (born 1982) Colombian artist (it may be too soon but has article in ES )
Eduardo Costa (born 1940), Argentine writer and conceptual artist
Lauren Hana Chai (born 1991)
Val Cushing / Val Murat Cushing (1931–2013), American potter
Elena Damiani (born 1979), Peruvian sculptor, has article in ES
Ras Dizzy / Arthur Livingstone / Birth Livingstone (c.1932–2008), Jamaican painter,
Beth Yarnelle Edwards , photographer
Judith Foosaner (born 1940), American painter
Erik Fleming (silversmith) (1894–1954), Swedish silversmith, court artist
Marianna Franken (1928–), Dutch ceramicist and potter[20]
Gregorio Gamarra (1601–1631), Peruvian artist; has WP articles in two languages
Tanatsei Gambura (born 1999), Zimbabwean-born multidisciplinary artist, poet
Paolo Gasparini (born 1934), Italian-born Venezuelan photographer
Nan González (born 1956), Venezuelan
Leonora Hall Gurley (1831–1903), art collection?[21]
Aya Haidar (born 1985), British multimedia artist of Lebanese descent, working to redefine motherhood
John Haymson (c. 1903–1980) Austrian-born American painter, taught at the Art Students League of New York
Kiluanji Kia Henda (born 1979), Angolan-born artist and photographer
Jay Howell (born 1979), American artist, character designer, illustrator, tattoo artist; worked on Bob's Burgers , and Sanjay and Craig
Adriana Lara (born 1978), Mexican visual artist
Gerd Leufert (1914–1998), German Empire-born Venezuelan painter
Louisa Marajo (born 1987), Martinique-born multidisciplinary visual artist
Frank Nicholas Otremba (Franz; 1851–1910), German woodcarver; settled in Honolulu in 1882
Maeble Claire Perry (1902–)
Zolile Petshane (born 1973), South African contemporary artist (check for notability)
Jock Reynolds (born 1947), American museum director, curator
Manuela Ribadeneira (born 1966), Ecuadorian-born British artist and curator
Femke Schaap (born 1972), Dutch sculptor
Manuel Silva (?–1906) Portuguese artist in Hawaii (work in Commons )
Kathia St. Hilaire (born 1995), American multidisciplinary artist that uses found materials
Dodi Tabbaa (born 1952), Pakistani painter, printmaker
Susie Taylor , textile designer, weaver, from Black Mountain School
Moussa Tine (born 1953), Senegalese contemporary painter; part of the second wave of the École de Dakar (School of Dakar) movement; has article
Inez Townsend Tribit (1877–1960), English-born American illustrator
Frede Vidar (1911–1967), Danish-born American muralist
Michelle Vignes
Indigenous craftspeople and visual artists
edit
Iroquois Realist Movement
Kaka Ashoona (1928–1996) Canadian Inuk sculptor
Marwin Begaye , Navajo
Victor Coochwytewa (b. 1922), Hopi jeweler
Etahdleuh Doanmoe , Kiowa painter
Charlie James (artist) , one of the Kwakwakaʼwakw Four
Martin de Loayza (or Loaiza), Peruvian mestizo painter and gilder; has WP articles
Crescencio Martinez , San Ildefonso Pueblo , 1879–1918
Santana Roybal Martinez , San Ildefonso Pueblo
Alfredo Montoya (c. 1890–1913), San Ildefonso painter
Al Momaday (1913–1981), Kiowa painter
Preston Monongye (1927–1987), Hopi painter
Louis Minard (1917–2004), Tlingit jeweler
Vincente Mirabel “Chiu-tah” (1918–1946), Taos Pueblo painter
Ningeeuga Oshuitoq (1918–1980), Inuk, Canada
Leo Poblano (1905–1959), Zuni jeweler
Paul Saufkie (1898–1993), Hopi jeweler
Dan Simplicio (1905–1959), Zuni jeweler
Paul Caryl Zotom (1853–1913), also known as Snake Head, Kiowa painter; see Ledger art
Hawaiian craftspeople and artists
edit
Aziz Balouch (1910–1978) was a Pakistani-born Spanish singer and guitar player[25]
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Wilson, Dreck Spurlock (2003-12-12). African-American Architects: A Biographical Dictionary, 1865-1945 . Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-203-49312-0 .
^ "Vivian Johnson Cook papers, 1903-1977" . WorldCat .
^ "Can Hip Hop Architecture Help Solve Design's Diversity Problem?" . Architectural Digest . Condé Nast. 2019-03-20. Retrieved 2023-02-20 .
^ "PIONEERING BLACK ARCHITECTS IN NORTH CAROLINA" . NCModernist Early NC Black Architects . Retrieved 2023-02-20 .
^ "Dykes, DeWitt Sanford, Sr" . Philadelphia Architects and Buildings, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia . Retrieved 2023-02-20 .
^ "Edwards, Gaston Alonzo (1875-1943)" . The NC State University Libraries . Retrieved 2023-02-20 .
^ Berkeley, University of California (1953). Commencement .
^ "Lawrence Reese" . SC Picture Project . 2015-04-11. Retrieved 2023-02-20 .
^ "Lloyd M. Cooke" . www.sigmaxi.org . Retrieved 2023-02-27 .
^ Spangenburg, Ray; Moser, Diane; Long, Douglas (2014-05-14). African Americans in Science, Math, and Invention . Infobase Publishing. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4381-0774-5 .
^ "Chester "Bromley" Hoke" . findagrave.com .
^ "Hoke Family Papers, 1870-1956, bulk 1890-1920" . New York State Library .
^ "Chester B. Hoke Historical Marker" . www.hmdb.org . Retrieved 2024-04-22 .
^ "St. John's Founder Peter Quire - Newport This Week" . Newport This Week . 2021-02-18. Retrieved 2023-02-20 .
^ Stokes, Keith (2023-01-10). "300-Year Newport African Heritage Timeline (1639–1939)" . Newport Life Magazine . Retrieved 2023-02-20 .
^ Wilson, Cynthia (2007-12-09). "Mary Ann Spencer Smith (1917-2001)" . Blackpast.org . Retrieved 2023-08-09 .
^ Williams, Shawna D. "Robinson Judson Wilbur, Sr" . Texas State Historical Association . Retrieved 2024-03-09 .
^ Murphy, Larry G.; Melton, J. Gordon; Ward, Gary L. (2013-11-20). Encyclopedia of African American Religions . Routledge. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-135-51338-2 .
^ "The Oshogbo Group" . Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism . Retrieved 2023-09-19 .
^ "Franken, Marianna" . Capriolus Contemporary Ceramics (in Dutch). Retrieved 2024-04-23 .
^ The Minute Man . Sons of the Revolution in the State of Illinois. 1921.
^ "Gordon 'Umi Kai: practitioner, artisan and kumu" . www.ksbe.edu . Retrieved 2023-09-03 .
^ D, Davey (2023-04-13). "Kumu Ipolani Vaughan weaves tradition and innovation to create masterpieces" . KITV Island News . Retrieved 2023-09-03 .
^ "The Auburn Joss House Historical Marker" . www.hmdb.org . Retrieved 2023-08-09 .
^ "From Sindh to Andalusia: The Life and Times of Sufi-Flamenco Star Aziz Balouch" . Ajam Media Collective . 2021-01-11. Retrieved 2023-09-26 .