BALTIMORE, MD.- On November 2, the Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) will open Amy Sherald: American Sublime, as the third venue for the artists acclaimed mid-career survey. The exhibition is the most comprehensive presentation of Sheralds work to date, illuminating the arc of her career from 2007 to 2024 through approximately 40 paintings. From foundational early works to some of her most iconic and recognizable paintings and rarely seen examples, American Sublime captures the power and poignancy of Sheralds artistry and traces her ascendance as one of the most influential figurative painters of our time. The exhibition will remain on view in Baltimore through April 5, 2026.
The presentation of American Sublime at the BMA is especially meaningful as Amy Sherald has deep ties to Baltimore and the museum had already planned to honor her with one of its Artist Who Inspires awards at the 2025 BMA Ball on November 22. Sherald spent many formative years of her career in the cityboth earning her M.F.A. in painting from the Maryland Institute College of Art and achieving national recognition while living hereso this exhibition represents a momentous homecoming for her. The BMA began championing Sheralds work when it acquired her painting Planes, Rockets, and the Spaces in Between in 2018, the year it was made, and has since featured her in several group exhibitions and programs. She will be honored at the BMA Ball along with artist Wangechi Mutu and the Sherman Family Foundation. More details about the BMA Ball and After Party will be shared as originally planned later in September.
Ive had the great pleasure and joy of knowing Amy Sherald for a decade. In that time, she has become a cultural force, capturing the public imagination through works that are powerful and resonant in their profound humanity. Amys story is also deeply intertwined with Baltimore. Beyond her education and time lived in our beloved city, Baltimore is rooted in her subjects, on her canvases, and in her titles, said Asma Naeem, the BMAs Dorothy Wagner Wallis Director. Presenting American Sublime at the BMA is a celebration of our creative community and a joyful reunion with those shaped by Amys extraordinary power to connect. Were thrilled to share her transformational work with our visitors.
Highlights include Sheralds Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition-winning painting Miss Everything (Unsuppressed Deliverance), the portrait of former First Lady Michelle Obama, the sweeping triptych Ecclesia (The Meeting of Inheritance and Horizons) created for this exhibition, the acclaimed memorial portrait of Breonna Taylor, and the monumental painting Trans Forming Liberty, among many other works.
Of the BMAs presentation Sherald said, Baltimore has always been part of my DNA as an artist. Every brushstroke carries a little of its history, its energy, its people, and my time there. To bring this exhibition here is to return that love.
American Sublime is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) and curated by Sarah Roberts, SFMOMAs former Andrew W. Mellon Curator and Head of Painting and Sculpture. It premiered at SFMOMA in fall 2024 and traveled to the Whitney Museum of American Art in spring 2025. American Sublime will be a special ticketed exhibition at the BMA. The BMAs presentation is organized by Asma Naeem, Dorothy Wagner Wallis Director with Cecilia Wichmann, Curator and Department Head of Contemporary Art; Antoinette Roberts, Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art; and Dylan Kaleikaumaka Hill, Meyerhoff-Becker Curatorial Fellow.
Tickets for Amy Sherald: American Sublime will go on sale October 1 for BMA members and October 8 for the general public. Prices are $18 for adults, $16 for seniors, $14 for groups of 7 or more, and $10 for students with ID. BMA members, individuals ages 17 and under, and student groups are admitted for free. Free admission is also available on Thursdays from 5 to 9 p.m., and on opening day, Sunday, November 2, as well as all day on Thursday, January 15, and Thursday, February 19.
The exhibition leads visitors through Sheralds poignant early works to the grandly scaled paintings for which she has gained significant renown. Sheralds paintings rework the Anglo-European traditions of portraiture in their evocation of everyday people existing in the contexts of everyday life. The exhibition focuses on the artists experimentation over the course of her career with the conventions of portraiture; her gifts for storytelling through color, pose, and dress; and her unflagging commitment to seeing individuals for who they are. Visitors will come away understanding the journey of Sherald as an artist as she hones her métier as one of the preeminent figurative painters of our time.
Sheralds works reflect the world in which she wishes to exist, where a shared humanity is elevated. Her sitters vary in age, gender, and identity and are often presented in roles that intersect with myths or ideas of American individuality and history, such as farmer, cowboy, and friends at the beach. These images challenge preconceived notions of race, focusing on interior life, imagination, and the universality of many experiences and narratives. Her signature gray palette for skin tones furthers this approach, inviting visitors to look beyond their immediate reactions to how someone appears on the outside to see the commonalities between all of us.
Photography is an important element of Sheralds creative process, serving as her sketchbook and the foundation for her compositions. With the exception of her two commissioned portraits of former First Lady Michelle Obama and Breonna Taylor, the artist selects each sitter based on her observations of their inherent qualities, such as poise, style, or witwhat she calls their ineffable spark. During photoshoots, Sherald lets her models pose organically, allowing for the synergy to build between them so that she can authentically capture their essence. She then curates each scene and styles the subjects in clothing that speaks to the narrative she wishes to craft, creating a sense of magical realism.
For the titles of her paintings, Sherald often draws inspiration from Black women writers and poets like Toni Morrison and Lucille Clifton, reinterpreting their poetry to develop different contexts around the interior worlds of her subjects. Through her explorations, Sherald redefines common beliefs about American identity, weaving a broader visual story of history and belonging.