Black Lunch Table is a vernacular history archiving project. Our mission is to build a more comprehensive understanding of cultural history by illuminating the stories of Black people and our shared stake in the world. We envision a future in which all of our histories are recorded and valued.
We are expanding our staff and board, diversifying our partnerships and donor bases and expanding our programming footprint. We are excited to continue the work of disrupting the dominant historical narrative and the systemic othering of Black voices. We continue the work of addressing historical omissions by empowering marginalized voices to record, transcribe, archive, and publish their stories.
We believe that true resource equity means equal access to knowledge, health, wealth, and social resources for everyone. This is only possible with a true and comprehensive record of the cultural, intellectual, and social contributions of Black artists.
We help to build this record through our in-person roundtable sessions and our online Wikipedia initiative.
Organized around literal and metaphorical lunch tables, our roundtable sessions convene spaces for genuine dialog on critical social issues, and then capture and share the rich conversations that grow out of this communion.
At the same time, our online initiatives facilitate the collective authoring, and expansive collection, of information pertaining to the lives and works of Black artists, allowing for an expansive and radical rewriting of history to include all voices.
Through the Artists Roundtable, we provide a forum for Black artists to discuss critical issues directly affecting our community, making visible the connections that exist between contemporary artists of color.
At the People’s Table, community members dialogue about social and political issues affecting historically disenfranchised peoples, illuminating points of alignment within local communities and laying the foundation for collective work dismantling institutional racism.
Our Wikipedia Initiative empowers people to document their own histories. We train participants to create, update, and improve Wikimedia articles and items pertaining to the lives and works of black artists.
The Archive provides a digital space for a community-driven approach to art, historical authorship, and discourse on Black studies and social justice issues. We organize and share both the recordings and transcripts from our roundtable session, demonstrating their relation not only to the individuals present but to a broader discourse about race unfolding within online spaces.
Black Lunch Table is a vernacular history archiving project. Our mission is to build a more comprehensive understanding of cultural history by illuminating the stories of Black people and our shared stake in the world. We envision a future in which all of our histories are recorded and valued.
We are expanding our staff and board, diversifying our partnerships and donor bases and expanding our programming footprint. We are excited to continue the work of disrupting the dominant historical narrative and the systemic othering of Black voices. We continue the work of addressing historical omissions by empowering marginalized voices to record, transcribe, archive, and publish their stories.