You can purchase any of these images at My Art Pal

You can purchase any of these images at My Art Pal

Listen to our podcast.
TV Talk With The Sistas
In this podcast, two sisters chat about iconic television shows and their impact on the African American and American culture.
Episode One
The Sistas examine the 1970s hit Sanford and Son starring Redd Foxx and the British murder mystery series, Midsomer Murders.
Episode Two
The Girls focus on the Netflix series The Crown and the 1980s crime drama In the Heat of the Night. They find similar qualities in the way they tell their stories.
Episode Three
The Girls focus on the 1980s Norman Lear sitcom The Jeffersons and the Netflix limited series Self Made: The Madam CJ Walker Story. They examine the impact of these stories on African American culture.
Episode Four
The Sistas talk about the James Bond,007 franchise and the impact they think it has had on society and culture. These two Bond lovers go toe to toe over who is the best Bond. They also introduce you to their rating system
Listen up…TV Talk With the Sistas Episode 4


Excited to share the latest addition to my #etsy shop: Homage Postcard #homage #art #diaspora https://etsy.me/2WSrTP8
This piece was included in the Winter Spring Issue of WORDPEACE magazine. It is titled Homage, a tribute to Aaron Douglass, an African American artist popular during the Harlem Renaissance.
You can purchase this postcard for $10.


My Thesis examines how African American beauty was marginalized through laws over hundreds of years. The story examines some moments in time that left a mark in history on my people. These marks shaped what we think is beautiful and continues to limit us today.
Dark skin was not attractive and over the years we have tried to convince them to lighten their skin if they want to be. In 1910s and 20s, women like Nina Mae McKinney could not play mammy roles because of her light skin and European features. She was a talented singer and dancer who scored so big the all African American movie Hallelujah (1929) that she became the first African American to be signed to a 5 year movie deal.
With this deal, she was limited to playing maids and servants. She knew she would never make it as a star being a maid so she moved to France, which welcomed her with open arms.
Nina Mae McKinney is a woman who used her talent despite what others thought. Her beauty is not only in how she looks but in how she lived. She didn’t let them stifle her talent.
The only role models little African American girls saw on the big screen in the United States were maids and servants for many decades. Generations grew up thinking beauty was for fair skinned and Flaxen hair as one author put it. We didn’t think brown skin and kinky hair had much value.
But times are changing. My new book More Than A Color will tell the story.
And oldie but a goodie. You can order Cute Shoes

Self Confidence

You can order this BlackGyrlArt Shirt

Fresh pico is everything.




This is the logo for BlackGyrlArt. You can support us by ordering BlackGyrlArt T-Shirt Here.

Self Confidence
