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The radiance of tomorrow: Douriean Fletcher and the Jewelry of the Afrofuture at MAD

Atmosphere at Museum of Arts and Design Celebrates Douriean Fletcher at Museum of Arts and Design on October 8, 2025 in New York.
Atmosphere at Museum of Arts and Design Celebrates Douriean Fletcher at Museum of Arts and Design on October 8, 2025 in New York.
(Photo by Patrick McMullan/PMC)

Afrofuturism has always been more than an artistic movement; it is a reclamation of destiny—a philosophy that wields beauty as both weapon and liberation. It is the re-centering of Black identity not at the periphery of history, but at its pulse point, fusing ancestral memory with celestial imagination.

In this spirit, the Museum of Arts and Design hosted an extraordinary luncheon honoring Douriean Fletcher: Jewelry of the Afrofuture—a gathering that transcended ceremony to become an act of cultural sovereignty. Beneath the refined glow of crystal and conversation, luminaries of art, design, and philanthropy convened to witness a woman who has carved her own mythology in metal and stone. Fletcher’s creations do not adorn; they activate. They transform adornment into empowerment, history into horizon, and remind us that the future, when rendered through Black brilliance, gleams brighter than gold.

At the head of this exquisite afternoon sat artist Douriean Fletcher, flanked by MAD Senior Curator Barbara Paris Gifford and co-curator Sebastian Grant, whose dialogue illuminated Fletcher’s singular role as both artisan and futurist. As Gifford noted, “Douriean is the very first jeweler to be recognized by the Motion Picture Costumer Union—a rare and deserved distinction. When we watch a film, we know the director, the designer, the star—but rarely the maker whose hands translate mythology into metal.” Fletcher, with the gravity of someone who understands legacy, replied, “Afrofuturism means putting me, or one who identifies as Black or African, in the middle of their own story. It is removing Eurocentric ideals and finding strength in self-defined beauty, belief, and belonging.”

Atmosphere at Museum of Arts and Design Celebrates Douriean Fletcher at Museum of Arts and Design on October 8, 2025 in New York.
Atmosphere at Museum of Arts and Design Celebrates Douriean Fletcher at Museum of Arts and Design on October 8, 2025 in New York.(Photo by Patrick McMullan/PMC)

That definition was felt, not just heard. Guests were guided through a private tour of the exhibition, anchored by the breathtaking breastplate crafted for Angela Bassett’s Queen Ramonda in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Under the lights, it shimmered not as mere ornamentation, but as armor—an artifact of sovereignty. “It was important to me to put as many stones on this breastplate as possible,” Fletcher explained. “In film, we don’t often see Africans wearing their own resources. I wanted to show the beauty of these semi-precious stones and see an African queen adorned in the wealth of her own land.”

It was a radical act rendered in gold and brass: a reclamation of image, of narrative, of ownership. Each gem spoke to the buried opulence of a continent too long mined and misrepresented. Fletcher’s work refuses that erasure; it declares that adornment is not vanity—it is vocabulary.

The afternoon itself glowed with the same fusion of intellect and elegance that defines MAD. Among the guests were Carrie Rebora Barratt, Janna Bullock, Sharon Bush, Barbara Cirkva, Machine Dazzle, Layla S. Diba, Helen Drutt, Isabelle Harnoncourt Feigen, Susan Gutfreund, Dr. Bruce C. Horten, LaVon Kellner, Elbrun Kimmelman, Michele Gerber Klein, Thomas Knapp, B. Michael, Nicole Miller, Chris Minev, Tinu Naija, Cheryl R. Riley, Kay Unger, and Rolonda Watts. It was a constellation of artistry and advocacy, gathered in celebration of a future built on ancestral brilliance.

Barbara Paris Gifford, Douriean Fletcher and Sebastian Grant attend Museum of Arts and Design Celebrates Douriean Fletcher at Museum of Arts and Design on October 8, 2025 in New York.
Barbara Paris Gifford, Douriean Fletcher and Sebastian Grant attend Museum of Arts and Design Celebrates Douriean Fletcher at Museum of Arts and Design on October 8, 2025 in New York.(Photo by Patrick McMullan/PMC/PMC)

Douriean Fletcher: Jewelry of the Afrofuture features seventy-five works charting Fletcher’s evolution from self-taught metalsmith to visionary designer for Marvel’s Black Panther films. Her creations—crafted from brass, gold, and semi-precious stones—transcend genre. They are sculpture, ritual, and resistance in one breath. Each piece explores the continuity between African and African American adornment, creating a dialogue that bridges communities once divided by colonialism and distance.

To walk through this exhibition is to encounter a lexicon of liberation—a reminder that craftsmanship is a form of prophecy. Fletcher’s jewelry is not jewelry; it is architecture for the body, philosophy made tangible.

Presented through May 15, 2026, Douriean Fletcher: Jewelry of the Afrofuture is a triumph of artistry and identity. Go. See it. Stand before Queen Ramonda’s breastplate and feel the hum of history reframed as radiance. Allow yourself to imagine what the future looks like when Blackness is not merely included but exalted.

For more information, visit madmuseum.org.