The High Museum of Art in Atlanta purchased Kara Walker’s fifty-eight- foot-long cut-paper silhouette installation The Jubilant Martyrs of Obsolescence and Ruin (2015), and acquired fifty-four works by thirty-three contemporary African-American artists from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, a nonprofit organization whose aim since 2010 has been to expand the recognition of leading contemporary African-American artists in the Southeast through support for exhibitions, programs and publications. In 2014, the Foundation began a program to transfer its collection to leading American and international museums. Another beneficiary of the Foundation’s gift-purchase arrangements in 2017 was the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco (FAMSF), which acquired sixty-two works of art made by twenty-two African-American artists, which are currently in an exhibition that runs through April 2018; the New Orleans Museum of Art and the Ackland Art Museum were also in receipt of the foundation’s collections, with the acquisition of ten and twelve works respectively.