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Kojo Kamau’s ACE Gallery Gave Black Columbus Artists a Place to Thrive


Richard Duarte Brown

People gave Richard Duarte Brown all sorts of reasons he couldn’t be an artist. “Everything has been done before,” they said. “You have to live in New York if you want to be an artist,” they told him. “And besides, you’re too shy.” 

“I wasn’t shy,” says Brown, who goes by Duarte. “I stopped talking because you’re telling me I can’t be who I know I am.” 

Brown came to Ohio to live with his brother at age 13, determined to be an artist. In his teenage years, he would visit the Columbus barbershop of wood carver Elijah Pierce, who would later become an internationally known folk artist. But it wasn’t until Brown was married with kids that he found a place he could truly call his artistic home: ACE Gallery.

Kojo Kamau, LaVern Brown and Larry Winston-Collins at ACE gallery in the Short North in 1999.

In the late 1980s, Brown worked as a screen printer at night and promoted his art to galleries during the day, eventually connecting with beloved folk artist Smoky Brown, who took Duarte under his wing and brought him to ACE—Art for Community Expression—a nonprofit gallery founded by photographer Kojo Kamau and his wife, Mary Ann Williams, that launched Downtown in 1979 and moved to the Short North in 1986. Smoky and Kamau sensed Duarte’s insatiable hunger to make art, and rather than encouraging him to get a degree and come back in a few years, they validated him and helped him find his way as an artist. “Kojo and all those guys just took me in,” Duarte says. “ACE made you feel like family.”



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