Duke and Duchess of Sussex give speech at The Kinsey Collection which showcases black art and history
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle gave a speech last night at an exhibition on black art and history in Los Angeles.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were pictured at the Kinsey African American Art and History Collection event at SoFi Stadium yesterday.
Meghan, 42, wore a floral embroidered Carolina Herrera wool cape worth £4,800, while Harry, 39, wore a smart suit with a white open-neck shirt.
TV personality Shaun Robinson today posted an image on Instagram of the couple at the exhibition holding microphones and speaking to an audience.
Ms Robinson, a supporter of the collection, said: ‘Thank you Duke and Duchess of Sussex and @thearchewellorganization for supporting the @kinseycollection.’
TV personality Shaun Robinson posted an image to Instagram today of Prince Harry and Meghan at the Kinsey African American Art and History Collection event at SoFi Stadium
In a second post featuring a panel discussion, she added: “Great discussion last night supported by @thearchewellorganization and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.”
Harry and Meghan live in nearby Montecito in a £12 million mansion with their children Prince Archie, four, and two-year-old Princess Lilibet.
It comes as Harry’s father, King Charles III, continues to undergo treatment for cancer – with Queen Camilla yesterday insisting he was ‘doing very well’.
And Harry’s sister-in-law, the Princess of Wales, remains out of the public eye as she continues to recover after her abdominal surgery in January.
Ms Robinson said in another Instagram post that Harry and Meghan were ‘supportive’ of the discussion
The exhibit aims to “celebrate the achievements and contributions of Black Americans from before the formation of the United States to the present.”
Bernard and Shirley Kinsey are behind the collection, having spent five decades amassing one of the world’s largest private collections of black art and artifacts.
The items include a 1963 typewritten letter from human rights activist Malcolm X to author Alex Haley, and a handwritten bill of sale for an enslaved black man from 1832.