Cleveland's Karamu House, a historic Black community arts center, became a hub for printmaking in the 1930s, fostering talent such as Langston Hughes and several renowned Black WPA-era artists like Elmer W. Brown and Hughie Lee-Smith. Karamu Artists Inc., formed there, highlighted themes of collective and personal identity, linking the center to American art movements of the 1930s and ’40s, including the WPA and the Harlem Renaissance. This exhibition features over 50 prints from Karamu Artists Inc., with contributions from local and national collections, accompanied by a catalog with essays by leading Black American art scholars.