RAISED IN NEW PROVIDENCE IN THE BAHAMAS, AND NOW BASED IN LOS ANGELES, APRIL BEY CREATES VIBRANT, INTERDISCIPLINARY WORK THAT FUSES PERSONAL MEMORY WITH CULTURAL CRITIQUE.
Drawing from her Bahamian upbringing, Bey weaves childhood stories, colors, and textures into a rich visual language that confronts colonial histories and reimagines Black futures. Her ongoing Atlantica series blends mixed media—jacquard woven textiles, fur, glitter, vinyl, and beads—with themes of Afrofuturism, feminism, Blerd culture, and speculative surrealism. Through portraiture and installation, Bey honors real-life figures from her communities, constructing icons of power, joy, and resistance. Her work is a layered celebration of queerness, identity, and imagined sovereignty—insisting that light lives in dark places, and that the future is already here.
