The Soho gallery is currently featuring Black artists in a tribute to mark 100 years since the massacre.
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In 1921, a white mob descended on a prosperous Black neighborhood known as Black Wall Street. Homes and businesses were destroyed and hundreds of Black Americans were killed over two days of bloodshed.
The vandalism outside the gallery on 26 Mercer Street included white paint scribbled over the Black Wall Street Gallery sign at the entrance of the exhibit.
Curated by gallery owner Dr. Ricco Wright, a fourth-generation Tulsan, 21 Piece Salute honors those who lost their lives and livelihoods in the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and celebrates Black entrepreneurship.
"There's a price for social justice and apparently this is it," Wright said.
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It is believed the vandalism happened sometime between 11 p.m. Sunday and 7 a.m. Monday even though the sign has been up for weeks.
Wright doesn't believe the timing was a coincidence.
"I don't believe in coincidences, in fact I think this is very deliberate and intentional, we come here, open up on Thursday, and on the very date on which the massacre happened 100 years ago, this happens overnight," Wright said.
Wright believes the anniversary and the vandalism at the gallery filled with the art of Black artists may be a good time for New Yorkers to reflect on their own history.
"Racism and slavery have been a part of New York's history and New Yorkers just haven't known, so this just illuminates that fact," Wright said.
The NYPD Hate Crimes task force was notified and is investigating.
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The exhibition runs from May 27 to June 19.
RELATED | Tulsa Race Massacre: Story behind Black Wall Street, racist mob that burned it to the ground
Tulsa Race Massacre 100 years later
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