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Voices of the Diaspora: The Artisans Behind the Canvas

Art transcends boundaries, echoing emotions, stories, and histories. Our artists are the pulse of the Miami Museum of Contemporary Art of the African Diaspora. Through their unique lenses, they capture the essence of the African Diaspora, weaving a narrative that binds continents, cultures, and communities. Discover the brilliance behind each masterpiece, the visionary artisans who breathe life into art.

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This is the first phase of Miami MoCAAD’s Digital Artist Library. This will be your go-to place to find artists.

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Jennifer Packer
Jennifer Packer

Jennifer Packer

BIOGRAPHY

Jennifer Packer (born 1984, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American painter whose work centers intimacy, vulnerability, and the emotional textures of Black life through portraiture and still life. Working primarily in oil on canvas, Packer creates atmospheric compositions in which figures and floral arrangements emerge from and dissolve into luminous, often spare grounds. Her paintings are marked by gestural brushwork, subdued yet radiant color palettes, and an intentional refusal of hyper-definition. Rather than rendering subjects with photographic clarity, Packer allows forms to blur and bleed, foregrounding feeling over precision. Across her practice, Packer explores themes of grief, tenderness, friendship, queerness, and the politics of representation. Her portraits frequently depict friends, family members, and members of her broader community, positioning painting as an act of care and relational witnessing. The body in her work is neither monumentalized nor sensationalized; instead, it is treated with quiet dignity, occupying space through presence rather than spectacle. Her floral paintings—often associated historically with memorial and decorative traditions—extend these inquiries, becoming meditations on loss, fragility, and the persistence of beauty amid vulnerability. Packer’s work also engages art historical lineages, drawing from traditions of European portraiture, still life, and abstraction while reorienting them through a contemporary Black feminist lens. By destabilizing the boundary between figure and ground, abstraction and representation, she creates a visual language that resists fixed interpretation. In doing so, her paintings challenge dominant narratives about visibility and legibility, insisting that Black interiority need not be fully disclosed to be fully present. Packer received her BFA from Tyler School of Art at Temple University and her MFA from Yale School of Art. She has exhibited widely in the United States and internationally, and her work is held in major institutional collections. She lives and works in New York.

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