
Last year’s Black Joy Day event at the Institute of Contemporary Art/BostonPhotographer
and community activist Thaddeus Miles wants to see more Black joy.
That’s been his mission since 2019 and for the past five years he’s
collaborated with the ICA Boston to celebrate Black Joy Day in
September.
“Too often that narrative
of Black people and about Black life is told out of the community’s
focus on pain, struggle and survival,” said Miles. “And you know, while
those things are true, it’s not the whole truth, right? For me, our
history is filled with laughter, creativity, brilliance and love.”
Miles
initially planned to launch a series of events celebrating joy and to
capture that joy with his camera. More than 300 people attended the
Black Joy Project launch at the Museum of Fine Arts in February 2020,
but the pandemic shutdown changed the opportunities for community
connection.
The City
of Boston named September 12, 2020, Black Joy Day and Miles has been
celebrating it annually ever since. He also posts photography, poems,
essays and other materials related to Black joy on his website
blackjoy.blog.
The
event originated as a celebration of culture, connection and community
and it has only grown over the years. Miles said that in previous years
the celebration has included kayaking on Fort Point Channel, visiting
the Children’s Museum and the ICA, crabbing, fishing, engaging with
artists and much more. And that spirit of curiosity and togetherness
carries on well after the event itself.
“It’s
more than just a single event,” he said. “It’s become more of a
movement. It’s inspired year-round conversations about wellness, about
culture, about unity.”
A
connection to Boston Harbor was important to Miles, which is why the
celebration now takes place at the ICA. It allows attendees to connect
with the city and the physical land and water that creates our home.
The
lineup for this year’s event is being finalized, but Miles says
attendees can expect live performances and DJ sets, community-based
vendors, storytelling, food trucks and, of course, access to the ICA.
“Portia
Zvavahera: Hidden Battles / Hondo dzakavanzika,” an exhibition of the
Zimbabwean artist’s work, will be on view.
Black
Joy Day, which is free and open to all, takes place at the ICA Boston
on September 12 from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Miles emphasized that the event is
intergenerational and family friendly.
“It
reminds us all that we have the right to experience life fully, not
just in survival mode, but in celebration,” said Miles. “It’s a
beautiful time.”
ON THE WEB
Learan more at icaboston.org/events/black-joy-day-2025