Harlem Postcards

Summer 2024

This Harlem Postcard is by Expanding the Walls 2024 participant Zenab Fofana. Expanding the Walls: Making Connections Between Photography, History, and Community is an eight-month photography-based program for a select group of students enrolled in a high school or GED program. Every year, one student in the Expanding the Walls program is invited to share an image that reflects on Harlem through their eyes.

ARTIST STATEMENT

While wandering through my neighborhood, I wanted to capture its rich musical heritage. Paying homage to Harlem, where music is an expression of cultural identity and creativity, this image captures a man playing his trombone on the corner of West 116th Street and Frederick Douglass Boulevard. The photograph shows a slice of life that connects the community’s musical past with its present, highlighting the rhythmic energy that permeates Harlem.

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Since the twentieth century, Harlem has been regarded as a beacon of African American history and culture. Sites such as the Apollo Theater, Abyssinian Baptist Church, and Malcolm X Corner, at 125th Street and Seventh Avenue, serve as popular postcard images that represent significant places and moments in this community.


Today, Harlem continues to evolve as a center of history and culture. Every day, changes are witnessed by its residents and experienced by tourists and visitors from all over the world. Harlem Postcards, an ongoing series, invites contemporary artists of diverse backgrounds to reflect on Harlem as a site of cultural activity, political vitality, and creative production.

Explore More

Harlem Postcards

Summer 2024

This Harlem Postcard is by Expanding the Walls 2024 participant Zenab Fofana. Expanding the Walls: Making Connections Between Photography, History, and Community is an eight-month photography-based program for a select group of students enrolled in a high school or GED program. Every year, one student in the Expanding the Walls program is invited to share an image that reflects on Harlem through their eyes.

ARTIST STATEMENT

While wandering through my neighborhood, I wanted to capture its rich musical heritage. Paying homage to Harlem, where music is an expression of cultural identity and creativity, this image captures a man playing his trombone on the corner of West 116th Street and Frederick Douglass Boulevard. The photograph shows a slice of life that connects the community’s musical past with its present, highlighting the rhythmic energy that permeates Harlem.

MORE

Since the twentieth century, Harlem has been regarded as a beacon of African American history and culture. Sites such as the Apollo Theater, Abyssinian Baptist Church, and Malcolm X Corner, at 125th Street and Seventh Avenue, serve as popular postcard images that represent significant places and moments in this community.


Today, Harlem continues to evolve as a center of history and culture. Every day, changes are witnessed by its residents and experienced by tourists and visitors from all over the world. Harlem Postcards, an ongoing series, invites contemporary artists of diverse backgrounds to reflect on Harlem as a site of cultural activity, political vitality, and creative production.

Explore More