On a recent Wednesday, at the Met Breuer, the Metropolitan Museum’s new outpost in the old Whitney building, a typical crowd—older, white— milled around the inaugural exhibit, “Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible.” Half-painted Picassos, a Warhol, and a large portrait by Kerry James Marshall, an African-American artist based in Chicago, were on view. The subject of Marshall’s painting is a woman with skin shaded gray to black, holding a palette; behind her, like a shadow, is a colorby-number outline of herself. Kimberly Drew, the Met’s twenty-five-year-old social-media manager and the founder of a popular Tumblr, Black Contemporary Art, admired the work with a friend, the artist Eric Mack. “It’s a portrayal of black femininity that’s not compromised— the direct stare, the skin color,” Drew said. “It’s a position of supreme power.”…
