Cauleen’s work is defined by its 21st century sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Conduct Your Blooming
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

The Fire Next Time, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Wild Seed, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Things Fall Apart, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Starfish, Sea Urchin, and their Kin, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

The Intimacy of Four Continents, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Sylvia Wynter, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

25 Kites that Fly, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Blues Legacies and Black Feminism, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Women, Race & Class, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Black Marxism, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

African Fractals, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

The Gift, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Black Women in White America, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Harriet Tubman, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

The World and Africa, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Young British & Black, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Martha Washington Goes to War, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Out of Order, Out of Sight, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967

Flyboy in the Buttermilk, from Human_3.0 Reading List
Cauleen Smith American, born 1967