Floyd Coleman is coauthor of Basic Design: Systems, Elements, Applications (Prentice Hall, 1984) and contributing author to Walls of Heritage Walls of Pride: African American Murals (Pomegranate, 2000). He is also professor emeritus, Department of Art, Howard University, Washington, DC
Jennifer McComas, PhD, is the curator of European and American Art at the Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University, Bloomington. A scholar of modern art, she is the author of the exhibition catalog Pioneers and Exiles: German Expressionism at the Indiana University Art Museum (IU Art Museum, 2012) and a contributor to the anthology Re-envisioning the Contemporary Art Canon: Perspectives in a Global World (Routledge, 2017).
Julie L. McGee is associate professor of black American studies and art history, and associate director of the Interdisciplinary Humanities Research Center at the University of Delaware. She has written and lectured extensively on African American art and contemporary art in South Africa, and has curated exhibitions for the David C. Driskell Center, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art in Maine, the Visual Arts Center of New Jersey and Guga S'Thebe Community Arts Centre in Langa (Cape Town), South Africa. With Vuyile C. Voyiya, McGee coproduced the documentary film The Luggage is Still Labeled: Blackness in South African Art. In 2011–12 she held the Dorothy Kayser Hohenberg Chair of Excellence in Art History at the University of Memphis.
Rachel Berenson Perry is the former fine arts curator of the Indiana State Museum, where she organized and curated all of the art exhibitions from 2003 through 2011. She is author of numerous articles for American Art Review and Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History (Indiana Historical Society) and was the winner of the 2014 Jacob P. Dunn Award for best article in Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. She is a well-known scholar of historical Indiana artists and author (with Selma N. Steele) of The House of the Singing Winds, finalist for 2016 INDIES book of the Year Award. Perry lives in Nashville, Indiana, where she writes books about Indiana artists and enjoys the ambiance and natural surroundings of Brown County.