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DATE 7/23/2026

Join us at the San Francisco Art Book Fair, 2026!

DATE 7/17/2026

LACMA Store presents Audrey Sands and Rebecca Morse on 'Lisette Model: The Jazz Pictures'

DATE 7/13/2026

An exploration of dancehall, reggae en español, and reggaeton through contemporary art

DATE 7/12/2026

Artbook @ Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles Bookstore presents Karl Haendel, Andrea Gyorody and Aldy Milliken on 'Less Bad'

DATE 7/11/2026

LA Showroom Summer Sample Sale, Save 75–85%!

DATE 7/11/2026

For 1970s beach vibe, you can’t do better than Joel Sternfeld’s ‘Nags Head’

DATE 7/8/2026

Conflict, culture and exchange in 18th-century art across the Americas

DATE 7/7/2026

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DATE 7/6/2026

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DATE 7/4/2026

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DATE 7/4/2026

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DATE 6/30/2026

SUMMER SALE! Save 75%

DATE 6/30/2026

A celebration of post-colonial independence in 'Architects of Liberation: Modernism in Western Africa'


IMAGE GALLERY

Singer Michael Prophet arrives in a taxi to Sugar Minott’s record outlet, Waltham Park Road, Kingston, Jamaica, where he is greeted by the Youth Promotion Sound System crew, 1986. From
CORY REYNOLDS | DATE 7/13/2026

An exploration of dancehall, reggae en español, and reggaeton through contemporary art

New from DelMonico Books, Dancing the Revolution: From Dancehall to Reggaetón is published to accompany the exhibition on view now at MCA Chicago. “In colonial contexts, music, dance and other forms of cultural expression are accessible ways to assert sovereignty amid the daily challenges of colonial violence,” Carla Acevedo Yates writes. “These are the ‘politics of enjoyment,’ a collective exercise of the senses, where Black Atlantic cultural performance practices serve as intangible sites in which sovereignty is reimagined and reclaimed. Like the beat of a drum, these practices awaken an essential life force within us. They allow us to access levels of embodied knowledge and joy that are intuitive and move with the improvisatory nature of Caribbean life itself—constantly adjusting and adapting to the sounds, rhythms, and sensations that surround us.” Featured photograph is by Adrian Boot, 1973. It is captioned: “Charlie Ace’s Swing-A-Ling mobile recording shop and studio. Run by Charlie Ace (real name Vernel Dixon), a legendary DJ in the 1970s as well as label owner of “Swing-A-Ling Records.” He worked with many producers including Lee Perry & Studio One. Sadly, Charlie Ace was gunned down, murdered in the early 1980s.”

Dancing the Revolution: From Dancehall to Reggaetón

Dancing the Revolution: From Dancehall to Reggaetón

DelMonico Books
Hbk, 8 x 10 in. / 304 pgs / 120 color.

$65.00  free shipping





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DATE 6/18/2026

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DATE 1/1/2026

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