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OSCAM and ARTNOIR Present 'Watering a Black Garden'

  • Art

OSCAM and ARTNOIR Present 'Watering a Black Garden'

A Transatlantic Exhibition Centering Joy, Lineage, and the Creative Sovereignty of Women of Color at OSCAM (Open Space Contemporary Art Museum), Amsterdam

March 6th to May 6th, 2026

Eight women and non-binary artists from across the African diaspora, based in six countries, come together in Amsterdam to affirm joy, presence, and flourishing as radical and necessary acts.

On March 6, 2026, OSCAM (Open Space Contemporary Art Museum) and ARTNOIR present Watering a Black Garden, a group exhibition that reimagines joy as a radical act of tending and becoming. Centering Black and Brown women as visionaries of abundance, the exhibition frames joy as an intentional and sustained practice of care within Black femme experiences.

This landmark exhibition marks a powerful transatlantic collaboration rooted in shared commitments to equity, visibility, and cultural exchange. The exhibition features work by Maty Biayenda, Jeannette Ehlers, Ufuoma Essi, Shaniqwa Jarvis, Rachel Marsil, Aline Motta, Bernice Mulenga, and Nengi Omuku.

Connecting New York and Amsterdam

With this collaboration, ARTNOIR makes its debut in the Netherlands, forging a cultural bridge between New York and Amsterdam. A female-majority, Black- and Brown-led platform, ARTNOIR supports artists of color through exhibitions, partnerships, and global storytelling.

Together, OSCAM and ARTNOIR expand access, visibility, and opportunity within the contemporary art world, bringing underrepresented voices to the forefront. The partnership connects local audiences with global conversations while positioning Amsterdam-Zuidoost on the international cultural stage.

Joy as a Sustained Practice

Watering a Black Garden takes inspiration from a seminal painting by Raymond Saunders, which bears the phrase “watering a black garden” written across a black canvas. The painting serves as both metaphor and call to action for the exhibition’s curators.

The exhibition asks: What does it mean to nurture oneself, one’s community, and one’s creative lineage in a world shaped by histories of erasure and ongoing inequity?

Through diverse artistic practices, “watering” becomes a metaphor for ongoing, intentional acts that foster flourishing. The garden emerges as a site where memory and lineage are nourished and alternative futures take root. Rather than functioning as a passive backdrop, the garden proposes a way of being—grounded, attentive, and expansive.

The richness of the exhibition reflects the fullness of Black and Brown femme life, where radiance is essential rather than decorative. Across disciplines, the artists assert presence as both a personal and political act, resisting invisibility while opening space for healing, connection, and becoming.

Marian Duff, Founding Director of OSCAM, shares:

“This collaboration feels both natural and deeply meaningful. I have followed ARTNOIR for many years, and I am proud that together we are bringing artists from around the world to Amsterdam-Zuidoost for their Dutch debut.”

Larry Ossei-Mensah, Co-founder of ARTNOIR and co-curator of the exhibition, adds:

“Watering a Black Garden is both an offering and an insistence. It creates space for women of color to be fully present—joyful, complex, and sovereign. The works in this exhibition remind us that flourishing itself is a form of resistance.”

Eight Artists from Across the Diaspora

The participating artists embody this ethos across diverse disciplines and cultural contexts:

  • Maty Biayenda (FR) interrogates the erasure of African narratives in European discourse.
  • Jeannette Ehlers (DK/TT) confronts colonial histories through processes of healing and repair.
  • Ufuoma Essi (GB/NG) explores Black feminist epistemologies and collective memory through video.
  • Shaniqwa Jarvis (USA) captures vulnerability and optimism through photography.
  • Rachel Marsil (FR) reimagines embodiment and identity through performance.
  • Aline Motta (BR) traces familial histories disrupted by colonial violence.
  • Bernice Mulenga (GB/DRC) examines intimacy within the self and the Black queer community.
  • Nengi Omuku (NG) creates immersive worlds reflecting place and belonging.

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