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  1. Aminah Robinson. Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson (February 18, 1940 – May 22, 2015) was an American artist who represented Black history through art. [1] [2] Early life and education. Robinson was born on February 18, 1940, to Leroy Edward Robinson and Helen Elizabeth Zimmerman-Robinson in Columbus, Ohio. [2] .

  2. ALL ABOUT AMINA. Born and raised in Philadelphia, Amina Robinson (she/her) is a professional actor, director, and currently a Professor of Acting and Musical Theater at Temple University. Amina has performed on Broadway (Mamma Mia, Godspell), as well as toured the country in Broadway National Tours (Mamma Mia, Little Shop of Horrors).

  3. About Aminah Robinson. Robinson is an instrument of memory, gathering stories, totems and fragments of the past to bring into the present and pass on to the future. Her art grows from her belief in the African concept of Sankofa, an understanding of the past so that we can learn from its richness, joys and mistakes.

  4. 1. Okt. 2021 · The first retrospective to display Robinson's work after her 2015 death, Raggin' On at the Columbus Museum of Art celebrates the grandeur of simple objects and everyday tasks.

  5. 30. Nov. 2020 · The Late Artist Aminah Robinson Dedicated Her Life to Recovering America’s Lost History. At Last, She’s Finding a Bigger Audience. A sprawling show of her work is on view at the Columbus Museum of Art, an institution that was close to her heart. Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson. Photo courtesy of the Columbus Museum of Art.

  6. In 2020, the Museum established the Aminah Robinson Legacy Project to encompass the myriad aspects of her life, proliferate awareness of her work, and place her in the pantheon of the most important twentieth and twenty-first-century American artists where she deservedly belongs.

  7. Aminah Robinson is represented in museums and galleries, including the Columbus Museum of Art, Akron Art Museum, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati. She passed away in May 2015.