• Flesh of their flesh

    polyethylene beads
    27” x 34.5”  |  2026

  • Remember this house

    acrylic, cotton, wool fiber, paradors, sequin, nylon thread
    49” x 30” x 7”  |  2026

  • Bone of their bone

    polyethylene beads
    34.5” x 41.5”  |  2026

  • Study 1

    photograph
    10” x 8.5”  |  2026

  • Study 2

    photograph
    10” x 8.5”  |  2026

  • Study 3

    photograph
    10” x 8.5”  |  2026

  • Come to me

    found paper, acrylic paint on archival paper
    32” x 24”  |  2025

  • Self Portrait 1

    fabric, ribbon, fiber, poly-fil
    62” x 16” x 6”  |  2024

  • Self Portrait 2

    fabric, ribbon, fiber, poly-fil
    74” x 14” x 6”  |  2024

BRITTNEY BOYD BULLOCK Representation Website

Memphis, TN | Painting, Sculpture, Mixed Media, Photography, Printmaking, Drawing, Installation
Bio:

Brittney Boyd Bullock is a Memphis-based visual artist whose practice traces the intimate relationship between craft legacies, material labor, and identity. Working through textiles, beading, and collage, in slow, modular processes, she builds abstracted worlds that honor both personal and collective memory.

Her work is grounded in repetition - stitching, beading, spinning, cutting, arranging - each functioning as a form of embodied research and ritual. Bullock draws on archival photographs, family histories, and Southern craft traditions to examine what has been preserved, overlooked, or obscured within Black American life. Rather than reenacting memory, she reframes it by treating materials as carriers of cultural knowledge. Her signature use of grids, layered images, textiles, and fiber reflects her interest in labor as a site of beauty, resistance, and renewal.

Bullock’s work has been exhibited at The Frist Museum, Cameron Art Museum, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the Phillips Collection, Dixon Gallery and Gardens, Benjamin Hooks Library, and the Art Museum of the University of Memphis. She’s been awarded grants and fellowships for her work as an artist working in communities, including the Americans for the Arts Public Art Scholarship and Robert E. Gard Award, the Kresge Foundation, and the Assisi Foundation. Awarded artist residencies/ grants include Crosstown Arts, Carrell Artist in Residence, New Public Artist Fellowship, and Current Art Fund grant from Tri-Star Arts.

In addition to her studio practice, Bullock is the Director of Programs at Contemporary Arts Memphis and a long-time educator, mentor, and facilitator. Her work in community contexts mirrors her artistic ethos: care, precision, and deep attention to the stories that shape us. She has also served as Project Manager for the Urban Art Commission, overseeing Memphis’s largest public art archive, and as Partnerships and Community Engagement Manager for Crosstown Concourse & Crosstown Arts, leading collaborative creative programs and exhibitions. As the former Director of Youth Programs for the Memphis Music Initiative, she designed and implemented an award-winning arts program that served Black and Brown youth across the city.

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