User:PigeonChickenFish/Article Suggestions

Architects

 * Council for Advancement of Negroes in Architecture (NACA)
 * Robert Lester Buffins (1892–1981), architect, educated at Howard University
 * Ralph Victor Cook (1875–1949), architect
 * William Jefferson Decatur (1874–unknown), architect from Atlanta, Georgia
 * Clyde Martin Drayton (1915–1983), architect from Southern Pines, North Carolina
 * DeWitt Sanford Dykes Sr. (1903–1991), architect and minister
 * Gaston Alonzo Edwards (1875–1943), architect, taught at Shaw University in Raleigh
 * Robert Lionel Fields (1918–1985), architect from Charleston, South Carolina
 * Wade Alston Ford (1886–1949), architect from Columbia, South Carolina
 * Mario Girona (1924–2008), Cuban architect, has article in other languages
 * Clinton Stevens Harris (1900–1992), architect from Queens, New York
 * Joseph E. Hill (unknown–1892), architect, teacher; from Philadelphia
 * James Edward Hutchins (1890–1970), architect from Blakely, Georgia; active in Jacksonville, Florida
 * Percy Costa Ifill (1913–1973), architect; from Harlem
 * Willie Edward Jenkins (1923–1988), (W. Edward Jenkins), architect practicing in North Carolina
 * Harvey Nathaniel Johnson Sr. (1892–1973), architect from Virginia
 * Arthur Edward Lankford (1879–1908), architect from Potosi, Missouri
 * Henry Lewis Livas (1912–1979), architect, educator; active in Norfolk, Virginia
 * Joseph Lincoln Parker (1898–1959), "architectural engineer associated with large public transportation projects in New York"
 * Edward Lyons Pryce (1914–), landscape architect, educated at Tuskegee Institute (B.S. 1937), Ohio State University (B.Land.Arch.1948).
 * Leon Andrew Ransom Jr. (1929–1971), architect from Columbus, Ohio
 * Lawrence Reese (1865–1915), self taught architect from Bennetsville in Marlboro County, South Carolina
 * Francis Jefferson Roberson (1862–1944), architect from Saint Louis, Missouri; designed St. Peter's African Methodist Episcopal Church in Minneapolis
 * Walter Lenox Roberts Jr. (1908–1982), architect, Modernist designs; from Cambridge, Massachusetts
 * Edward Eyestone Young (1870–1934), American architect best known for designing San Francisco's Pacific Heights homes in the early 1900s

Art historians, curators

 * C. Ondine Chavoya (born 1970), American art historian, author, curator, professor; specialized in Latino and Queer art history
 * Leuli Luna’i Eshraghi, Canadian-born curator, writer, artist of Iranian and Samoan heritage
 * Howard Risatti, American, professor emeritus of art history at Virginia Commonwealth University; ACC fellow

Black history / African American history

 * African Americans in Louisiana; needs expansion
 * William Thomas Amiger (c. 1870–1929), American college president, Baptist minister, educator
 * William Beckham (born 1866–?), American Baptist minister, community leader
 * Othello Burghardt (c. 1791–1872; Othello Burget), grandfather of a great many notable African Americans (including W. E. B. Du Bois), lived in Great Barrington, Massachusetts
 * Lloyd Miller Cooke (1916–2001), (Draft:Lloyd Miller Cooke) noted African American industrial chemist and researcher, son of architect William Wilson Cooke (1871–1949)
 * William Abraham Creditt (1864–1921) American minister, university founder, president of the New England Baptist Convention
 * Chester Bromily Hoke (1847–1913; also known as Bromley Hoke, Bromily Hoke, Chester “Bromley” Hoke), "mulatto", served in the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, Co. G during the American Civil War; lived at Hoke House in Canajoharie, New York
 * John Edward Perry, or J. Edward Perry;, physician
 * Peter Quire (Draft:Peter Quire), Black leader and founder of St. John's Episcopal Church in Newport, Rhode Island
 * Mary Ann Spencer Smith (1917–2001; Draft:Mary Ann Spencer Smith), postal worker, real estate broker, and civil rights activist - she worked to eliminate redlining in San Jose, California
 * Isreal Pinkney Stanback, businessman and philanthropist from Columbia, South Carolina
 * Obadiah Summers (1844–1896), minister, and served as the California State Legislature as its first black chaplain.
 * Wakefield Institute, former African-American private college in New Iberia, Louisiana; closed in 1874
 * Charles Thomas Walker (1858–1921) American Baptist minister, civic leader
 * Robinson Judson Wilbur Sr. (1904 – c. 1986), businessman, realtor, and civic leader in Pleasantville, Texas; first African-American mortgage company in Texas approved by the FHA
 * West Broad Street School former school in Athens, Georgia; first black school in the state

Movements and groups

 * École de Dakar (School of Dakar)
 * Oshogbo Group or the Oshogbo School, Nigerian modernist art movement
 * San Francisco Poster Syndicate
 * Broadmoor Art Academy, 30 W. Dale St., Colorado Springs, Colorado (redirects from Colorado Springs Fine Arts Cente r)

People

 * Beatrice Winn Berlin (1922–1999), American painter and printmaker
 * Jen Bervin, visual artist and poet, from Black Mountain School
 * Rachid Bouhamidi (born 1981), American painter, of French and Moroccan heritage
 * Helen Breger (1918–2013), Austrian-born American printmaker, illustrator, educator
 * Natalia Castañeda Arbelaez (born 1982) Colombian artist (it may be too soon but has article in ES)
 * Eduardo Costa (born 1940), Argentine writer and conceptual artist
 * Lauren Hana Chai (born 1991)
 * Val Cushing / Val Murat Cushing (1931–2013), American potter
 * Elena Damiani (born 1979), Peruvian sculptor, has article in ES
 * Ras Dizzy / Arthur Livingstone / Birth Livingstone (c.1932–2008), Jamaican painter,
 * Beth Yarnelle Edwards, photographer
 * Judith Foosaner (born 1940), American painter
 * Erik Fleming (silversmith) (1894–1954), Swedish silversmith, court artist
 * Marianna Franken (1928–), Dutch ceramicist and potter
 * Gregorio Gamarra (1601–1631), Peruvian artist; has WP articles in two languages
 * Tanatsei Gambura (born 1999), Zimbabwean-born multidisciplinary artist, poet
 * Paolo Gasparini (born 1934), Italian-born Venezuelan photographer
 * Nan González (born 1956), Venezuelan
 * Leonora Hall Gurley (1831–1903), art collection?
 * Aya Haidar (born 1985), British multimedia artist of Lebanese descent, working to redefine motherhood
 * John Haymson (c. 1903–1980) Austrian-born American painter, taught at the Art Students League of New York
 * Kiluanji Kia Henda (born 1979), Angolan-born artist and photographer
 * Jay Howell (born 1979), American artist, character designer, illustrator, tattoo artist; worked on Bob's Burgers, and Sanjay and Craig
 * Adriana Lara (born 1978), Mexican visual artist


 * Gerd Leufert (1914–1998), German Empire-born Venezuelan painter
 * Louisa Marajo (born 1987), Martinique-born multidisciplinary visual artist
 * Frank Nicholas Otremba (Franz; 1851–1910), German woodcarver; settled in Honolulu in 1882
 * Maeble Claire Perry (1902–)
 * Zolile Petshane (born 1973), South African contemporary artist (check for notability)
 * Jock Reynolds (born 1947), American museum director, curator
 * Manuela Ribadeneira (born 1966), Ecuadorian-born British artist and curator
 * Femke Schaap (born 1972), Dutch sculptor
 * Manuel Silva (?–1906) Portuguese artist in Hawaii (work in Commons)
 * Kathia St. Hilaire (born 1995), American multidisciplinary artist that uses found materials
 * Dodi Tabbaa (born 1952), Pakistani painter, printmaker
 * Susie Taylor, textile designer, weaver, from Black Mountain School
 * Moussa Tine (born 1953), Senegalese contemporary painter; part of the second wave of the École de Dakar (School of Dakar) movement; has article
 * Inez Townsend Tribit (1877–1960), English-born American illustrator
 * Frede Vidar (1911–1967), Danish-born American muralist
 * Michelle Vignes

Indigenous craftspeople and visual artists

 * Iroquois Realist Movement
 * Kaka Ashoona (1928–1996) Canadian Inuk sculptor
 * Marwin Begaye, Navajo
 * Victor Coochwytewa (b. 1922), Hopi jeweler
 * Etahdleuh Doanmoe, Kiowa painter
 * Charlie James (artist), one of the Kwakwakaʼwakw Four
 * Martin de Loayza (or Loaiza), Peruvian mestizo painter and gilder; has WP articles
 * Crescencio Martinez, San Ildefonso Pueblo, 1879–1918
 * Santana Roybal Martinez, San Ildefonso Pueblo
 * Alfredo Montoya (c. 1890–1913), San Ildefonso painter
 * Al Momaday (1913–1981), Kiowa painter
 * Preston Monongye (1927–1987), Hopi painter
 * Louis Minard (1917–2004), Tlingit jeweler
 * Vincente Mirabel “Chiu-tah” (1918–1946), Taos Pueblo painter
 * Ningeeuga Oshuitoq (1918–1980), Inuk, Canada
 * Leo Poblano (1905–1959), Zuni jeweler
 * Paul Saufkie (1898–1993), Hopi jeweler
 * Dan Simplicio (1905–1959), Zuni jeweler
 * Paul Caryl Zotom (1853–1913), also known as Snake Head, Kiowa painter; see Ledger art

Hawaiian craftspeople and artists

 * Hawaiian art, needs to be expanded; Category:Artists from Hawaii
 * Bruce Ka'imiola Chrisman (Bruce Chrisman), dermatologist and artisan of Hawaiian ipu pā wehe (decorated gourds)
 * Momi Greene, artisan of Hawaiian ipu pā wehe (decorated gourds)
 * Paulette Kahalepuna, Hawaiian teacher of the ancient Hawaiian art of lei hulu (feather lei making)
 * Umi Kai (Gordon ʻUmialīloalāhānauokalākaua Kai), Hawaiian artist of weapons; ʻōlohe lua (master of traditional martial arts)
 * Mary Louise Kekuewa (1926–2008; Mary Louise Kaleonahenahe Wentworth Peck Kekuewa), Hawaiian teacher of the ancient Hawaiian art of lei hulu (feather lei making)
 * Ipolani Vaughan, Hawaiian teacher of the Hawaiian language, hula and ulana (weaving)

Places and sites

 * Auburn Joss House (c. 1921), Auburn, California; a Ling Ying Association building and now the Joss House Museum; has historical marker
 * Long Beach Municipal Auditorium Mural (1936–1938) WPA-mural in Long Beach, California at 3rd and Promenade

Other

 * Aziz Balouch (1910–1978) was a Pakistani-born Spanish singer and guitar player
 * Reed Hearon (born 1957), American chef, restauranteur, and cookbook author; James Beard Award winner (1996)