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AS BLACK HISTORY MONTH KICKS OFF, NYC & COMPANY SPOTLIGHTS BLACK CULTURE AND EXPERIENCES IN NYC

2/4/21

* Updated February 10, 2021



AS BLACK HISTORY MONTH KICKS OFF,
NYC & COMPANY SPOTLIGHTS BLACK CULTURE AND EXPERIENCES IN NEW YORK CITY



—City’s Tourism Organization Launches The Black Experience in NYC on NYCgo.com with New Neighborhood Guides, Interviews, Videos and More Celebrating New York City’s Black Community



Five-Borough Cultural Institutions Offer Virtual and In-Person Programming Throughout Black History Month and Beyond



New York City (February 4, 2021) – As Black History Month kicks off, NYC & Company, the official destination marketing organization and convention and visitors bureau for the five boroughs of New York City, today is launching a new centralized resource for locals and visitors, The Black Experience in NYC, available at nycgo.com/TheBlackExperience. With new neighborhood guides, videos, interviews, articles, roundups of Black-owned businesses and more to be added over time, this evergreen content hub is dedicated to celebrating the diversity and nuances within New York City’s Black community and all that makes it unique in the world. Timely events and celebrations will also be highlighted, including dynamic cultural programming, which is being offered both virtually and in person this Black History Month and beyond. NYC & Company has collated 21 Ways to Celebrate Black History Month in 2021 in NYC, below.                             



“As Black History Month kicks off this week, we are excited to launch this all-new permanent resource celebrating Black culture and the Black travel experience in New York City. NYC & Company is committed to doing even more to lift up the City’s vibrant and diverse Black community all year long, showcasing the many authentic experiences the five boroughs offer,” said Fred Dixon, President and CEO of NYC & Company.



With the largest Black population of any city in the United States, Black culture is integral to New York City’s identity – from its world-renowned music and style, celebrated food scene, the visual and performing arts, local businesses, and more. The City is the most visited urban destination in the U.S. by Black travelers, accounting for almost one in five visitors to the five boroughs*.




The Black Experience in NYC



As part of today’s launch, NYC & Company unveiled a dynamic new video celebrating the vibrancy and cultural nuances of New York City’s Black community, which enrich the City’s diversity and provide an experience like none other in the world.



New and recently added content also includes Black-Owned Neighborhood Guides spotlighting businesses and visitor experiences in Harlem, Bedford-Stuyvesant and Flatbush (with more forthcoming), and Love Letters to New York City from Black community leaders including Tenicka B. (Nonprofit executive and digital content creator), Dondre Green (NYC-based photographer and Director, Bronx Narratives), Rondel Holder (Senior Director, Multicultural Content, NYC & Company and Founder, Soul Society 101) and Sade Lythcott (CEO, National Black Theatre).



Additional highlights include select All In NYC: Portraits videos, which tell the stories of small-business owners and community leaders across the five boroughs including historic Neir’s Tavern owner Loycent Gordon, Bronx bookstore The Lit. Bar’s Noëlle Santos and Shelley Worrell of Caribbeing and Little Caribbean, and others.



The Black Experience in NYC also spotlights Black History and Culture Sites in the five boroughs and ways to support the City’s Black community including Black-Owned Restaurants and Black-Owned Shops, among other resources.



New content and information will be added on a regular, ongoing basis at nycgo.com/TheBlackExperience.




21 Ways to Celebrate Black History Month in 2021 in NYC



NYC & Company has highlighted 21 ways to celebrate Black History Month in 2021 in New York City, below. For more virtual activities, visitors can check out the Black History Month collection at nycgo.com/virtualnyc.

























  1. NYC Restaurant Week

    has officially been extended until February 28. New Yorkers can order takeout/delivery meals for $20.21 at more than 570 eateries, including this collection of almost 40

    Black-owned restaurants

    that are participating in the program.

  2. The prestigious

    Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater

    is sharing videos of previous on-stage performances with

    Ailey All Access

    , including a current spotlight on Wayne McGregor's

    Chroma

    , Ronald K. Brown's

    Grace

    , Robert Battle's

    Takademe

    and Alvin Ailey's

    Revelations

    , all performed at Lincoln Center. Additionally, as part of

    Ailey Extension

    , students can explore a range of dance techniques from across the African diaspora with workshops and classes throughout the month of February.

  3. The

    Bronx Museum of the Arts

    has extended its

    Sanford Biggers: Codeswitch

    exhibit through April 5, featuring more than 50 quilt-based works by the New York–based artist, whose work weaves together contemporary art with African American history and traditions.

  4. On February 19 CUNY’s

    Center for Black Literature (CBL)

    will offer a free, online panel discussion about

    We Are Worth Fighting For: A History of the Howard University Student Protest of 1989,

    featuring Dr. Joshua Myers of Howard University; Mayor Ras J. Baraka of Newark, NJ; April R. Silver of AKILA WORKSONGS; and writer asha bandele.

  5. Downtown Alliance

    is partnering with

    Black Gotham Experience

    Founder Kamau Ware on a new written series about the African diaspora in New York, and Lower Manhattan’s role within those stories. Ware’s first piece focuses on

    the Slave Market at Pearl Street and Wall Street

    .

  6. Beginning tomorrow, February 5,

    Flushing Town Hall 

    is presenting

    Black History Trilogy

    , a special three-part series featuring performances by Broadway’s Alton Fitzgerald White, Lillias White and André De Shields.

  7. With

    Harlem Heritage Tours

    , individuals can explore the Upper Manhattan neighborhood’s rich history, with guided tours covering topics including the Harlem Renaissance, the American civil rights movement, and more.   

  8. Inside Out Tours

    is offering both in-person and virtual versions of the Lower Manhattan

    NYC Slavery & the Underground Railroad Walking Tour

    , which explores New York City’s colonial roots, including the site of the City’s first slave market, a former stop on the Underground Railroad, the African Burial Ground Memorial, and more.

  9. Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning (JCAL)

    is rolling out

    virtual Black History Month programs

    including exciting, impactful and ongoing programs in dance, music, film, spoken word, theater and more.

  10. Leslie-Lohman Museum

    , the only dedicated LGBTQ art museum in the world, is reopening its doors this Saturday, February 6. Those looking to experience the museum from home this month can stream the new

    Rashaad Newsome: Black Magic

    performance film, which celebrates the resiliency and strength of the Black Queer community.  

  11. Louis Armstrong House Museum

    will present

    The Real Ambassadors in Concert

    on February 9. The free, online concert will celebrate the 60-year-old album by Dave and Iola Brubeck, which features a jazz musical written in Louis Armstrong’s honor.

  12. The Metropolitan Opera

    celebrates Black History Month with two weeks of

    Nightly Opera Streams

    featuring some of the greatest performances by African American singers from the past 50 years, including Kathleen Battle, Lawrence Brownlee, Jessye Norman, Eric Owens, Leontyne Price, Florence Quivar, Shirley Verrett and others.

  13. This month, Brooklyn’s

    Museum of Food and Drink (MOFAD)

    is presenting

    six online programs

    celebrating the contributions of African American chefs, distillers, activists and more. The series highlights themes from the museum’s upcoming

    African/American: Making the Nation’s Table

    exhibition, which has been delayed since March 2020.

  14. Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America


    debuts at the

    Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)

    on February 27, exploring how architecture, Blackness and anti-Black racism intersect, with 10 newly commissioned pieces on display for the first time. The exhibit is on display through May 31.

  15. From February 17 through June 6, the

    New Museum

    is presenting

    Grief and Grievance: Art and Mourning in America

    . With works by 37 artists across video, painting, sculpture, photography and more, the exhibition addresses the concept of mourning, commemoration and loss in response to the racist violence that Black communities across the nation experience.

  16. The virtual 28th edition of

    the New York African Film Festival

    runs today through February 14 at Film at Lincoln Center and from February 18 through March 4 at the Maysles Documentary Center, spotlighting 10 feature films and 21 short films from Africa, Europe, North America and South America.

  17. From February 15 to 19,

    Queens Botanical Garden

    will present

    Celebrating Black Botanists: Midwinter Break Family Virtual Series

    online, celebrating historical Black botanists and scientists with demonstrations of their discoveries, suggested at-home activities and an introduction to BIPOC-led organizations that are carrying on the legacies of their work.

  18. The Shed

    is debuting a new film and self-guided audio tour by Kamau Ware (

    Black Gotham Experience

    ) titled

    Fighting Dark

    , exploring Manhattan and Brooklyn’s history of racial violence and resilience in the 19th century, including the July 1863 race riots.

  19. In conjunction with its

    Women of the Nation Arise!

    exhibit, the

    Staten Island Museum

    will present an online discussion,

    Drusilla Poole and Local Suffragists in Their Own Words

    , on February 18. The session will highlight the work of local suffragists including Drusilla Poole, whose organization, the Women’s Civic and Political Union, encouraged Black women on Staten Island to vote and learn about politics.

  20. In celebration of Black History Month,

    St. George Theatre

    ’s

    Virtual Arts-in-Education series

    will introduce students grades K–5 to concepts like freedom, integration and equality by telling the stories of civil rights activist Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and baseball legend Jackie Robinson. The shows are available for viewing through February 28.

  21. This Saturday, February 6,

    The Studio Museum in Harlem

    is offering a

    Visual Storytelling Workshop

    as part of its Memories for the Future workshop series. Led by teaching artists and visual storytellers Jazmin Jones and Jeannette Rodríguez-Píneda, the workshop will teach participants to use visual storytelling skills in creating a personal short film.



Those exploring the five boroughs are encouraged to wear masks, practice social distancing and frequently wash and sanitize hands, as indicated in NYC & Company’s Stay Well Pledge.



For more information about all there is to see and do in New York City, visit nycgo.com.



* Source: NYC & Company/DKS

About NYC & Company:
NYC & Company is the official destination marketing organization and convention and visitors bureau for the City of New York, dedicated to maximizing travel and tourism opportunities throughout the five boroughs, building economic prosperity and spreading the positive image of New York City worldwide. For all there is to do and see in New York City, visit nycgo.com.



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