In 2020, The Black Woman is God virtual exhibition will assert that celebrating Black women are essential to building a more just society and a sustainable future. The project will explore the intersectionality of race, age, and gender and will dismantle stereotypes of Black women. TBWG will reach out across global communities to reclaim physical space historically denied Black women artists. In doing so, generations will reclaim the legacy of Black women artists.

TBWIG exhibitions reconfigure communal trauma through healing, African, Diaspora traditions and practices. Connecting dance forms that are rooted in cultural, historical and cosmological recognition in public spaces with recognizable African motifs embedded in the form. The program will provide a bridge to the historical meaning of the expression, exploring the deep cultural competence of the artists. The mission is to establish expression that has moved beyond embattled ideologies and communities to African spiritual growth.

The community connections will address the varying artistic mediums of visual and performing arts, workshops, and artist talks all designed to re-remember that Black people are the first human beings that have contribute to society even beyond African culture.

The 2020 Black Woman is God exhibition will explore the intersectionality of race, age, and gender and will examine Black women's historical contributions beyond American society as artists, healers, and social change-makers. The exhibition will feature approximately 70 new works by Black women employing painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, film/video, mixed, and new media.