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General Information

Locality: Oakland, California

Phone: +1 401-935-6854



Address: 560 Second Street, Studio 10 94607 Oakland, CA, US

Website: www.oakandpearlprints.com

Likes: 342

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Oak & Pearl Prints 12.11.2020

The 12th Dak'art Biennale! Follow them @Dak_artbiennale on Twitter

Oak & Pearl Prints 01.11.2020

This is expansive! Follow this kat on Twitter #elseedart and on facebook at eL Seed. eL Seed used over 50 buildings to create this piece.

Oak & Pearl Prints 20.10.2020

Great recognition of Baltimore's art scene, history of their importance in the arts, and the awesomeness of Amy Sherald. #amysherald #baltimorearts

Oak & Pearl Prints 13.10.2020

If you're not following Brittani Sensebaugh "Brittsense" on either Instagram or Facebook, you should. Her work, #222 ForgottenCities: the Power of Melanin, is at Betti Ono in Oakland through April 16, 2016.

Oak & Pearl Prints 24.09.2020

Don't miss out on this amazing photo editorial of blak "dandy queens" in Blackattitude Magazine by Prisca M. Monnier & Nadeen Matecky. What a powerful addition to the photo essays about gender fluidity around the world. #dandyqueens #blakdandies

Oak & Pearl Prints 13.09.2020

Beautiful photons of Misty Copeland in Degas tableaux. #mistycopeland #blakballerinas #hero

Oak & Pearl Prints 27.08.2020

What a great way to separate words from meaning! Expansive thought for kids, not limited thought!

Oak & Pearl Prints 13.08.2020

Support the Q*Arts! Get on this people. Inquire about prints, monographs, originals. Put our mons with our mouths are! #queerarts #socialrevolutiongoals

Oak & Pearl Prints 31.07.2020

Thank you Oakland! #kissmyblakarts. Revolution, people!

Oak & Pearl Prints 28.07.2020

Yasss! Nerdy, latina comic book character! ScholaR! #chola #diversityinart

Oak & Pearl Prints 14.07.2020

Getting it done! #artisrevolution #reclaimMLK @blacksaltcollective

Oak & Pearl Prints 26.06.2020

"There was a joke for a long time that if you went into a museum, you’d think America had only two black artists Jacob Lawrence and Romare Bearden and even then, you wouldn’t see very much, said Lowery Stokes Sims, the first African-American curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and later the president of the Studio Museum in Harlem. I think there is a sea change finally happening. It’s not happening everywhere, and there’s still a long way to go, but there’s momentum."