Revolt Art Fair in Miami champions thriving Black art market
Briefly

Revolt Art Fair in Miami champions thriving Black art market
""What's different about this year is that we are going beyond the idea of what a traditional fair is and what it could mean within the context of the Black artistic landscape," Andrieux tells The Art Newspaper."
""The intention was to create a larger net for us to capture more directly the diversity that existed in terms of artists that are working not only locally and nationally but internationally," Harley says."
""We've captured a slice of this intergenerational audience who wants to be spoken to," she says."
Revolt Art Fair stages its second edition, Dual Currency: Defiance by Design, at Ice Palace Studios near NADA Miami. The fair features work by more than 50 Black artists and digital creators and centers economic access for Black audiences historically excluded from the broader art market. Visitors can purchase works via QR code through Ujamaa, an art-market app named for the Swahili principle of cooperative economics. Curators Amy Andrieux and Zindzi Harley focused the fair on celebrating Black art in 2025 and expanded programming with a digital open call for an LED presentation at the Saturday closing party that reflects hip-hop legacy. Highlighted works include textile, woven, and photo-based pieces with prices displayed.
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