- Olivia Brooks
- Oct 29
- 2 min read
Updated: Oct 30
Amuri Morris

Shelton Johnson Calls (2021)
Oil Paint
18 x 24 x 2 in

Girl With a Pearl Hoop (2022)
Oil Paint
16 x 20 x 0 in

Rapunzel (2020)
Oil Paint
18 x 24 x 1 in

One Night (2023)
Oil Paint
16 x 20 x 1 in

Our Lady (2020)
Oil Paint
9 x 10 x 0 in

Cycles (2024)
Oil Paint
20 x 16 x 0.5 in

All Eyez On Me (2024)
Oil Paint
12 x 12 x 0.5 in

Spirit of the Wolf (2024)
Oil Paint
30 x 24 x 0.5 in

"I aim to show how western culture tends to negate and undermine the place of black figures. I want
to explore this displacement by bringing visibility to these figures and acknowledging the presence these
usurped figures had in western backdrops. I often superimpose a higher presence in a corrective manner. The intersectionality between the often overlapping trauma of blackness, womanhood, and (the disadvantaged) class becomes readily apparent in my work. This plane of intersectionality is conceived from hegemonic powers that narrate our invisibility or roles as Jezebels, Mammies, Sapphires, or deviants. To combat this I aim to depict black beauty and excellence. My pieces break free from this imposed identity and explore new ranges. It's important to see the black protagonist, the black leader, the black achiever, while still consciously alluding to and rectifying the imposed otherness of black figures. My paintings create this fantastical fruitfulness that gratifies my inner child but also often acknowledges the "making do" of the past and the often unconventional charm these memories have. Although these adversities were present there is a nostalgic lens I look back on my childhood memories with that points towards resilience. The intersection between the past, present, and reimagined spaces all pull together to varying degrees in my work."
AMURI MORRIS is an artist based in Richmond, Va. She recently graduated from painting and printmaking at Virginia Commonwealth University. Throughout the years she has acquired several artistic accolades such as a Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Fellowship and has participated in over a dozen exhibitions. She aims to promote diversity in art canon, specifically focusing on the black experience. You can find more of her work at www.murisart.com.





