Home / Books / Art as Sanctuary

Art as Sanctuary

Conjuring an Africana Aesthetic

Cover of Art as Sanctuary is white with a light blue gradient featuring a piece of art showing Africana aesthetics. The art features the face of a woman in blue with a cowrie shell drawn on her forehead.

Religious Cultures of African and African Diaspora People

More about this series

Read the Introduction

Book

Pages: 262

Illustrations: 86 color illustrations

Published: February 2026

In Art as Sanctuary, Michael D. Harris considers literal and metaphorical uses of sanctuary in the black experience and African diaspora art, including locales of spiritual expression, self-renewal, and cultural celebration. Harris offers an alternative framework to the Duboisian philosophy of double consciousness, pushing the boundaries of Africana aesthetic analysis by exploring the cultural signifiers embedded consciously or unconsciously in African diaspora art. Within these works, he reveals how these cultural cues speak to the vibrancy of African American life. While acknowledging the presence of the white observer’s gaze, Harris wishes to relieve the black interior from the panoptic assumptions of that gaze and its disciplines. Art as Sanctuary provides innovative pathways to understand African American visual culture and music as autobiographies of cultural identity and experience.

Praise

“In Art as Sanctuary, Michael D. Harris revisits a selection of significant works by African American artists and reframes them in ways that expand their meaning through new, globally focused contextualizations. In highlighting the importance of art as both shelter and balm, he offers us imaginative refuge in today’s world.” - Kellie Jones, author of South of Pico: African American Artists in Los Angeles in the 1960s and 1970s

Buy

Availability: In stock

Price: $37.00

Request a desk or exam copy Spring 2026 Web Sale

Information

Author/Editor Bios

Back to Top
Michael D. Harris (1948–2022) was an artist, curator, and scholar and the author of Colored Pictures: Race and Visual Representation.

Dianne M. Stewart is Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Religion and African American Studies at Emory University.

Theophus H. Smith is Emeritus Associate Professor of Religion at Emory University.

Richard J. Powell is John Spencer Bassett Professor of Art & Art History at Duke University and editor of Archibald Motley: Jazz Age Modernist, also published by Duke University Press.

Table Of Contents

Back to Top
List of Illustrations  vi
Foreword / Richard J. Powell  ix
Editors’ Introduction. Michael D. Harris: Cultural Theorist of Africana Identity, Art, and Spirituality / Dianne M. Stewart and Theophus H. Smith  xvii
Introduction. Sanctuary and the Black Interior  1
1. The Moan: Calling Forth Culture  27
2. Etymologies and Black Love  50
3. From The Banjo Lesson to The Piano Lesson: Reclaiming the Song  70
4. Fish Fry Music: A Blues Aesthetic  87
5. Gospel, Tongues, and Bearing Witness  114
6. Undone: Bottle Trees, Charms, and Flashing Spirits  132
7. Talking in Tongues: Revisiting/Reflecting Kara Walker  156
Conclusion. Bebop Ghosts and Freedom Songs  174
Notes  191
Bibliography  213
Index

Rights

Back to Top

Sales/Territorial Rights: World

Rights and licensing

Additional Information

Back to Top
Paper ISBN: 978-1-4780-1769-1 / Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4780-1506-2 / eISBN: 978-1-4780-2230-5 / DOI: https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478022305