
Dawoud Bey Blanket
To celebrate the exhibition Dawoud Bey: An American Project, on view until October 3, 2021, we have partnered with EVEYBODY.WORLD to create this 100% cotton blanket, featuring West 124th Street and Lenox Avenue, 2016.
This work was featured in Bey's Harlem Redux show at Stephen Daiter Gallery, in which he explored and captured the transition that was taking place due to gentrification, and the effects of displacement for a community that was once vibrant and celebrated.
This work was featured in Bey's Harlem Redux show at Stephen Daiter Gallery, in which he explored and captured the transition that was taking place due to gentrification, and the effects of displacement for a community that was once vibrant and celebrated.
$68.25
Original: $195.00
-65%Dawoud Bey Blanket—
$195.00
$68.25Dawoud Bey Blanket
To celebrate the exhibition Dawoud Bey: An American Project, on view until October 3, 2021, we have partnered with EVEYBODY.WORLD to create this 100% cotton blanket, featuring West 124th Street and Lenox Avenue, 2016.
This work was featured in Bey's Harlem Redux show at Stephen Daiter Gallery, in which he explored and captured the transition that was taking place due to gentrification, and the effects of displacement for a community that was once vibrant and celebrated.
This work was featured in Bey's Harlem Redux show at Stephen Daiter Gallery, in which he explored and captured the transition that was taking place due to gentrification, and the effects of displacement for a community that was once vibrant and celebrated.
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Description
To celebrate the exhibition Dawoud Bey: An American Project, on view until October 3, 2021, we have partnered with EVEYBODY.WORLD to create this 100% cotton blanket, featuring West 124th Street and Lenox Avenue, 2016.
This work was featured in Bey's Harlem Redux show at Stephen Daiter Gallery, in which he explored and captured the transition that was taking place due to gentrification, and the effects of displacement for a community that was once vibrant and celebrated.
This work was featured in Bey's Harlem Redux show at Stephen Daiter Gallery, in which he explored and captured the transition that was taking place due to gentrification, and the effects of displacement for a community that was once vibrant and celebrated.















