We Don’t Need a Museum to Matter

By Ayana Clarke | Heritage & Place Contributor, Mood Magazine Museums are sacred. But so are block parties. So is…
1 Min Read 0 25

By Ayana Clarke | Heritage & Place Contributor, Mood Magazine

Museums are sacred.

But so are block parties.

So is a photo of your grandmother at 17, framed in gold, sitting on the same wall for 40 years.

Harlem has always been its own museum.

We don’t wait for permission to preserve ourselves. We wear our history. Speak it. Paint it. Sing it loud enough to shake the glass off white walls. Our archives aren’t behind velvet ropes — they’re in our beauty salons, our church basements, our brownstone stoops.

When institutions erase us, we archive ourselves. Not because we want attention — but because we remember.

And memory is a radical act.

I grew up down the block from Langston Hughes’ house. Not inside a tour group. Not holding a brochure. Just passing it every day on my way to school. That’s how Harlem teaches you: without ceremony. You learn to sense the sacred in the ordinary. You understand that greatness is not only possible — it’s personal.

My mother kept our family photos in a heavy leather album that weighed more than some history books. Inside were birthdays, baptisms, barbecue sauce on white tank tops. It wasn’t curated — it was lived. And it was proof: We were here. We mattered. Look.

The first time I visited the Met, I was twelve. I saw Egyptian gold behind glass, Greek busts in marbled rooms, and oil paintings of people who never looked like anyone I knew. When I asked where the Black people were, the docent told me, “That’s more of a niche section.” A niche. As if Black existence were a footnote. As if we didn’t build, birth, break, and rebuild the world.

I went home, walked past Langston’s brownstone, and exhaled.

We are not a niche. We are the foundation.

The thing about Harlem is: our stories never needed a museum to survive. We’ve been doing this. Saving ticket stubs from Amateur Night at the Apollo. Writing names in the margins of church programs. Hanging graduation photos in the hallway like portraits of royalty.

We are memory workers — even when we don’t call it that.

And yet, the danger of erasure is real. Developers come in and rename corners. Historic clubs become yoga studios. Elders pass without their stories being recorded. It happens fast. And it’s intentional.

That’s why Mood Magazine matters. That’s why walking tours matter. That’s why every block needs a griot, every family needs a historian, every child needs to know who held the line before them.

Because if we don’t name it, someone else will.

And they will not get it right.

I’m not anti-museum. I believe in the power of cultural institutions. But I also believe that a living culture breathes beyond walls. It spills out onto sidewalks. It rides buses. It speaks in slang and sings in sanctuaries. Harlem is an open-air exhibition — and we’re the curators.

To live here with awareness is to carry a kind of responsibility. To recognize that every brownstone, every beat, every old woman selling sweet potato pie from her window is a story worth honoring.

So the next time you see a mural, don’t just take a photo. Ask about the face. Ask who they were.

When your auntie tells a story, write it down.

When you pass a Black-owned bookstore, stop in.

When you walk these streets, remember: they’re not just sidewalks. They’re scrolls.

We don’t need a museum to matter.

Because Harlem remembers.

And memory — full, flawed, beautiful, bold Black memory — is our masterpiece.

JARVUSHESTER

JARVUSHESTER

Verified by MonsterInsights