Close Menu
  • News
  • Stocks
  • Bonds
  • Commodities
  • Collectables
    • Art
    • Classic Cars
    • Whiskey
    • Wine
  • Trading
  • Alternative Investment
  • Markets
  • More
    • Economy
    • Money
    • Business
    • Personal Finance
    • Investing
    • Financial Planning
    • ETFs
    • Equities
    • Funds

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest markets and assets news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending Now

NOMAD art fair to launch first U.S. edition in the Hamptons this summer.

May 27, 2026

Ren Light Pan Dramatizes the Dilemma of the Trans Artist.

May 27, 2026

AI debate erupts over ‘colourised’ version of a classic Ansel Adams photo – The Art Newspaper

May 27, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
The Asset ObserverThe Asset Observer
Newsletter
LIVE MARKET DATA
  • News
  • Stocks
  • Bonds
  • Commodities
  • Collectables
    • Art
    • Classic Cars
    • Whiskey
    • Wine
  • Trading
  • Alternative Investment
  • Markets
  • More
    • Economy
    • Money
    • Business
    • Personal Finance
    • Investing
    • Financial Planning
    • ETFs
    • Equities
    • Funds
The Asset ObserverThe Asset Observer
Home»Art Market
Art Market

Remembering Napoleon Jones-Henderson, an AfriCOBRA Founding Member Who Imbued Art and Life with Exuberant Energy

News RoomBy News RoomApril 23, 2026
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

“Do the work” was Napoleon Jones-Henderson’s mantra. He believed that beautiful things grow wherever people invest themselves in the labor of collective empowerment. 

Born in Chicago in 1943, Jones-Henderson grew up in the Bronzeville neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side and attended George Washington Carver High School, where he was introduced to weaving by an influential art teacher. This teacher “threw the doors open,” as Jones-Henderson remembered, connecting him more formally to what he called the “life activity” of quilt making and the mending the women in his family undertook at home. After high school, Jones-Henderson received a scholarship to study at the Sorbonne in Paris, where the curriculum was overwhelmingly centered on a European discourse that he found largely unaccommodating to non-European perspectives. Later, at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he earned his BFA, Jones-Henderson had a similar experience, though he counted himself fortunate to study there with artist Else Regensteiner (1906–2003). Alongside a notable few, Regensteiner is credited with advancing the artistic approaches of the Bauhaus movement in the textile arts in America. She also connected Jones-Henderson directly to this lineage. 

In 1969, while still a student, Jones-Henderson became a founding member of the influential artist collective the African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists (AfriCOBRA). Often referred to as “the weaver” of the group, Jones-Henderson adapted Regensteiner’s expert use of color and her integration of nontraditional materials, such as metallic thread and found objects, to create his own signature textiles. These works express AfriCOBRA’s aesthetic principles—to create images inspired by the “expressive awesomeness” of the lived experience and the cultures of people of the African diaspora in an accessible, graphic style with shining Kool-Aid colors. 

In 1974, Jones-Henderson met artist Calvin Burnett and a group of his students from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design (MassArt) while in Chicago. At their invitation, he came to Boston to teach textile weaving. Inspired by the history of textile manufacturing in the area and the availability of shiny metallic yarns that offered a unique means of expressing AfriCOBRA’s ideas, Jones-Henderson moved into the former home of abolitionist Edward Everett Hale in Roxbury. There, for more than 50 years, he cultivated a rich studio practice where his life and art were fully integrated, creating small- and large-scale works in fiber and mosaic, prints and mixed media works on paper, and shrine-like devotional sculptures. 

In its many material manifestations, Jones-Henderson’s work was oriented around themes of empowerment, Pan-Africanism, and racial justice. His kaleidoscopic works are self-affirming and reflective, with an eye toward both a fraught past and a liberated future. He often gravitated to a line from James Baldwin’s 1961 book Nobody Knows My Name: “The artistic image is not intended to represent the thing itself, but rather, the reality of the force the thing contains.”   

In the years following Jones-Henderson’s move to Roxbury, he settled into an active role as an educator and a mentor with an outsized presence in the community. He was a member of the Boston Collective, led by esteemed elder artist Allan Rohan Crite, and his home was a key artistic meeting place aligned with the African American Master Artists-in-Residence Program at Northeastern University and the Museum of the National Center of Afro-American Artists. He was deeply involved with the National Conference of Artists for decades and even organized their 24th annual exhibition in Boston in 1982, featuring the work of artists Lethia Robertson, Joyce J. Scott, and Theresa-India Young. His dedication to collective empowerment was unparalleled, which makes his passing an immense loss. But his life’s work is an indisputable reminder to invest in one another and keep doing the work together.  

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

NOMAD art fair to launch first U.S. edition in the Hamptons this summer.

Ren Light Pan Dramatizes the Dilemma of the Trans Artist.

AI debate erupts over ‘colourised’ version of a classic Ansel Adams photo – The Art Newspaper

‘Prediction Markets’ Come to Art Auctions: Now You Can Bet on Basquiat and Monet, Courtesy of Kalshi

Collectors Anita and Poju Zabludowicz to Sell $20.1 M. in Art at Christie’s

5 Women Artists Who Shaped the Studio Glass Movement in the U.S.

$50,000 Driskell Prize Goes to Cheryl Finley of Spelman College

Jewish Heirs Call for Restitution on Cézanne Watercolor, Kalshi Launches Art Auction Market, and More: Morning Links for May 27, 2026

Jackson Pollock Transformed American Art—and Was Destroyed by His Own Success

Recent Posts
  • NOMAD art fair to launch first U.S. edition in the Hamptons this summer.
  • Ren Light Pan Dramatizes the Dilemma of the Trans Artist.
  • AI debate erupts over ‘colourised’ version of a classic Ansel Adams photo – The Art Newspaper
  • ‘Prediction Markets’ Come to Art Auctions: Now You Can Bet on Basquiat and Monet, Courtesy of Kalshi
  • Collectors Anita and Poju Zabludowicz to Sell $20.1 M. in Art at Christie’s

Subscribe to Newsletter

Get the latest markets and assets news and updates directly to your inbox.

Editors Picks

Ren Light Pan Dramatizes the Dilemma of the Trans Artist.

May 27, 2026

AI debate erupts over ‘colourised’ version of a classic Ansel Adams photo – The Art Newspaper

May 27, 2026

‘Prediction Markets’ Come to Art Auctions: Now You Can Bet on Basquiat and Monet, Courtesy of Kalshi

May 27, 2026

Collectors Anita and Poju Zabludowicz to Sell $20.1 M. in Art at Christie’s

May 27, 2026

5 Women Artists Who Shaped the Studio Glass Movement in the U.S.

May 27, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
© 2026 The Asset Observer. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.