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ROY CROSSE: Contrast Between Dreams and Reality, Opening Reception

ROY CROSSE: Contrast Between Dreams and Reality, Opening Reception

The Eubie Blake Cultural Center (EBCC) will present ROY CROSSE: Contrast Between Dreams and Reality, a major exhibition reexamining the work and legacy of Roy Crosse, a multidisciplinary artist whose practice engaged African diasporic symbolism, cultural memory, and the spiritual dimensions of Black identity.

This exhibition marks a significant effort to more fully situate Crosse’s work within both Baltimore’s cultural history and the broader field of African American art.

The title Contrast Between Dreams and Reality reflects Crosse’s sustained exploration of the relationship between spiritual imagination and lived experience, a theme that shaped his work across multiple decades and artistic forms.

Working across painting, drawing, sculpture, masks, and mixed media, Crosse developed a visual language rooted in African diasporic traditions and shaped by Baltimore’s cultural life. Over more than four decades, he maintained an active exhibition history across national and international institutions while remaining deeply engaged in artist networks and community-based cultural exchange, including his deliberate establishment of a home and studio in the early Station North area, made possible in part through a Joan Mitchell Foundation grant.

“Roy Crosse represents a generation of artists whose work emerged from deeply rooted cultural traditions and community exchange. His practice reflects the ways African diasporic symbolism, spirituality, and personal narrative have informed the visual language of many Black artists working outside dominant institutional frameworks. Revisiting his work today allows us to better understand Baltimore’s cultural history and the networks of artists who helped sustain its creative vitality.”

— Dr. Leslie King Hammond and Ernest Shaw, Curators

The exhibition situates Roy Crosse within Baltimore’s broader Black creative ecosystem, emphasizing the role of mentorship, artistic exchange, and community knowledge in shaping cultural production. It advances a more complete understanding of his work within both Baltimore’s cultural history and the broader field of African American art.

About the Exhibition ROY CROSSE: Contrast Between Dreams and Reality is curated by Baltimore artist and curator Ernest Shaw and internationally recognized art historian Dr. Leslie King Hammond, with consultation from Anelda Peters, the artist’s widow and steward of his work.

The exhibition is part of a broader initiative by the Eubie Blake Cultural Center to document, interpret, and elevate Crosse’s legacy. Much of the artist’s work remains in private stewardship, making this exhibition an important opportunity to present his work within a museum context.

In addition to the gallery presentation, the project includes a series of public programs designed to engage audiences with the interdisciplinary nature of Crosse’s practice and the cultural environment in which he created. These programs extend the exhibition’s focus on interdisciplinary practice and community knowledge.

Programming includes:

• live music and performance programs

• intergenerational artist conversations

• community gatherings and dialogues

• an immersive digital exhibition tour extending access to regional, national, and international audiences

These components reflect the exhibition’s broader themes of heritage, community unity, and cultural continuity.

About Roy Crosse Roy Crosse (1945–2014) was a multidisciplinary artist whose work spanned painting, drawing, sculpture, and installation. Born in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and trained in Toronto, his practice was shaped by migration, diasporic identity, and transnational experience.

Over a career of more than four decades, Crosse exhibited widely in the United States and internationally, with presentations at institutions including the Newark Museum, Montclair Art Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Palermo, Italy. His work is held in public and private collections, including the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and the Absolut Expressions Collection.

Crosse’s work engaged African diasporic symbolism, spiritual traditions, and cultural memory, developing a visual language that moved between abstraction and figuration. In addition to his studio practice, he was an educator and mentor whose influence extended through artistic networks and community relationships.

While his work was widely exhibited, his contributions have not been fully situated within broader art historical narratives. His legacy endures through both institutional collections and the communities he helped shape.

About the Eubie Blake Cultural CenterThe Eubie Blake Cultural Center is dedicated to preserving and celebrating African American art, history, and culture. Through exhibitions, performances, and educational programs, the Center provides a platform for artists and scholars while fostering community engagement with the arts.

Located in downtown Baltimore, the Center honors the legacy of legendary jazz musician Eubie Blake while supporting contemporary artistic expression. The Center is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.

Event Contact

Derek Price
410-225-3130

Event Details

Saturday, April 11, 2026, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
410-225-3130
Free

Location

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