Cross‑Continental Canvas: Art that Bridges Dallas and Africa
Dallas, Texas, USATue Jun 09 2026
Bukekile Dube, a Zimbabwean born in 1975, has made Dallas her home for over twenty years. She founded Indibano Art Residency to give African artists a place to work in Texas, and she runs the program from a modest bungalow in Midway Hollow. \\
Her goal is simple: let art speak where words fall short. She has organized trips for contemporary Black American artists to Africa, creating a two‑way dialogue that fuels new ideas. \\
The latest outcome is an exhibition at the South Dallas Cultural Center called “No Walls Between Us. ” The show displays works from eleven artists across South Africa, the United States and Zimbabwe. It includes Kganya Mogashoa’s striking portraits, Tamary Kudita’s stylish photography, and a deeply personal altar that Dube built to honor her family. \\
The curator explains that the collection defies easy labels. The African‑based artists bring their own visions, while those who traveled to Africa respond to new landscapes and histories. The exhibition is not about one place or the other; it is a conversation that thrives in the space between. \\
Viewers can purchase pieces at approachable prices: small 8‑by‑8 inch “creative blocks” start at $285, while a mixed‑media canvas by Richie Madyira is offered for $6, 800—well below its European value. Dube’s aim isn’t to dominate the local market but to unite Dallas’s diverse residents through relatable images. \\
She notes that the art may resonate with collectors, but its real purpose is to help people who feel separated from their roots or current surroundings find common ground. \\
The exhibition invites everyone to see that Black art is vibrant and varied, refusing a single narrative. It shows how shared creativity can build bridges across continents.
https://localnews.ai/article/crosscontinental-canvas-art-that-bridges-dallas-and-africa-345c30fa
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