Tamara Payne
Booth 024Native to Baltimore City Tamara Payne is an alumnus of the Baltimore
School for the Arts where she began her artist’s practices in drawing, painting,
and sculpture. After studying Fashion at Parsons School of Design in New
York City, NY, she returned to Baltimore to earn her BFA majoring in painting
with a minor in ceramic studies at the Maryland Institute College of Art. Upon
graduating, Tamara worked as an art educator in Baltimore City Public
Schools. Having an innate passion for humanity she has been involved in
foreign missions for over 27 years, participating in health aid and
beautification projects while painting and curating murals in poverty-stricken
communities in South Africa, The Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico,
Baltimore City and beyond.
Tamara decided to pursue her own community-based art making full-time in
2008. In the summer of 2011, she earned her Masters of Community Arts
degree from the Maryland Institute College of Art while also completing two
years of service for The Community Art Collaborative AmeriCorps program.
She went straight into her community arts practices while also winning The
PNC Bank Transformative Art Prize earlier that spring for a public art installation in Baltimore City. Later that year
she would be honored as an Arts and Cultural Partnership Awardee from Greater Homewood/Strong City Baltimore.
Additionally, she continues to be recognized for awards and publications citing her community installations for her
butterfly murals in Baltimore City. In 2022 Tamara was honored with her second Individual Artist Award on behalf
of the City of Baltimore and Mayor Brandon Scott for her exhibition work for The Dear Black Girl Project. She is
also a two-time honoree of the Black Wall Street Award, being recognized for her continuous contributions in grant
writing, and in community activism. In the spring of 2024, she was recognized by City Council President Nick
Mosby for her service as a woman who advocates for equity, diversity and inclusion through her continued work in
community.
Tamara is currently working full-time as an Associate Professor in her role as Visual Arts Coordinator at Baltimore
City Community College while recently completing her second graduates’ degree from MICA’s MFAST Low
Residency Program. Tamara is currently working on future collaborations with Black Art Today and other
organizations to continue to curate interior spaces in community for black and brown women and girls to be
witnessed.
As a multidisciplinary artist known for her collaborations with black women, Tamara’s dynamic work explores the
constructions of marginalized communities through multimedia, fashion, public installations, film, assemblage,
portraiture and performance art. Her work is heavily influenced by her experiences in girlhood, womanhood, and the
construction of her memory. While she focuses on self-exploration, healing, communal practices and relationship
building she continues to explore many ideas to empower Black women and girls. Her work has been featured in the
Baltimore Times, Essence Magazine, Bmore Art, Travel Noire, The Baltimore Sun, Forbes Magazine, Voyage
Baltimore and in the spring of 2025, she was featured in Le’ Figaro Magazine in Paris France as one of Baltimore’s
collective artists and entrepreneurs just to name a few. She welcomes others to witness this ordained journey of her
work that is truly meant to inspire all people.