About BAM Houston
About BAM Houston
MISSION STATEMENT
Black Arts Movement Houston (BAM) exists to champion Black artists, empower youth, serve the Black community, and activate the city of Houston through culturally grounded programming, artistic excellence, and a commitment to justice, legacy, and joy—all through a distinctly Black lens.
VISION STATEMENT
To ignite and sustain a thriving Black creative spirit in Houston—by building a powerful, artist-led movement that nurtures Black artists, affirms Black culture, and anchors Black joy, power, and legacy in the city’s cultural life. Through this work, BAM seeks to position Houston as a national leader in cultural equity by placing Black creativity at the heart of the city’s future.
OUR VALUES
HEALING AS LEADERSHIP
SHARED AUTHORSHIP
INTEGRATION OVER PERFORMANCE
LINEAGE & MEMORY
ACCOUNTABILITY TO COMMUNITY
Who We Are
Black Arts Movement Houston (BAM) comes directly out of more than two decades of Black artistic practice and community-rooted work led by Urban Souls Dance Company. For over 20 years, Urban Souls has modeled what it means to create art with integrity, cultural accountability, and deep responsibility to Black people.
BAM was born from that work not as a departure, but as an expansion.
As Urban Souls demonstrated what sustained Black-led artistry could look like on stage and in community, BAM emerged to build the broader infrastructure artists need offstage: leadership development, cultural organizing, systems change, and long-term sustainability.
BAM exists to translate lived artistic practice into movement-level impact, centering Black artists as leaders, culture-bearers, and stewards of Black community well-being.
What We Do
BAM exists to explicitly support Black artists and the Black communities they are accountable to. Our work is grounded in the belief that when Black artists are resourced, connected, and trusted as leaders, entire communities benefit.
We support Black artists by creating programs and spaces that center belonging, leadership, healing, and cultural responsibility. Our core programs include:
- Black Artists Convenings – Regular gatherings that bring Black artists together for connection, strategy, healing, and collective visioning. These convenings create space for truth-telling, relationship-building, and shared leadership across disciplines and generations.
- BAM Fellows Program – A 12-month artist-leadership fellowship for Black artists at different stages of their journey, designed to deepen leadership capacity, cultural accountability, and collective impact.
- Artist Residencies & Exchanges (Houston–Rwanda) – Artist-in-residence and exchange opportunities connecting Black artists in Houston with artists in Rwanda, grounded in shared exploration of healing, memory, reconciliation, and global Black lineage.
- Black Houston – A cultural platform and body of work dedicated to uplifting, documenting, and celebrating Black Houston as a living ecosystem of creativity, history, and community power.
Our programs are not transactional. They are relational, artist-led, and rooted in long-term investment in Black creative life.
BAM Leadership
BAM is co-architected and led by Black artists committed to shared authorship, collective responsibility, and accountability to Black communities.
Together, BAM’s leadership centers artist-led systems, healing, and long-term cultural infrastructure.
Harrison Guy
Founder, Co-Lead Architect
Walter J. Hull, II
Co-Lead Architect
Mayra Bullock
Managing Director, Urban Souls Dance Company
Christopher Robinson
Marketing & Communications






