Art
Arnold Genthe
Arnold Genthe photographed New Orleans in the 1920s.
Arnold Genthe photographed New Orleans in the 1920s.
The journal "Art and Letters" played a significant role in the development of the late-nineteenth-century New Orleans arts community.
The Artists' Association of New Orleans, which was incorporated in 1886, promoted the appreciation of fine arts in the South in general and New Orleans in particular.
Between 1922 and 1951, the Arts and Crafts Club of New Orleans worked to enrich and expand the city’s artistic heritage and served as one of its cultural centers.
Due to her tireless grassroots organizing efforts, Audley Moore was known as “Queen Mother” of the Black Freedom Movement and the modern reparations movement.
Tyler was the first African American woman to win an Olympic medal.
Fronting the Mississippi River, Audubon Park is one of New Orleans' most popular attractions for both tourists and locals.
August Norieri was a New Orleans born painter best known for his Louisiana maritime subjects such as sailboats, bayous, and lakes.
Artist and teacher Auseklis founded the New Orleans Academy of Fine Arts in 1978.
Baby Dodds has become among the most respected and influential representatives of early jazz drumming from New Orleans.
The Baby Dolls were one of the first women's street masking groups in the United States. The practice continues today as a living legacy.
Brothers Edward and Gaston Barq began bottling carbonated water and soft drinks in New Orleans in 1890.
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