"[A] deeply researched, panoramic depiction of how black artists made not only great art, but their own art world in Los Angeles during two crucial decades.... Quite simply, the history, not just of art in Los Angeles, but of modern American art generally will have to be reconceived on the basis of <i>South of Pico</i> and <i>Now Dig This!</i>."
- Barry Schwabsky, Hyperallergic
"<i>South of Pico</i> is a testament to the pioneers of African–American art in the twentieth century, who forged new paths to liberation and selfhood through their work. Jones shows how these artists pushed against their own obliteration, and generated a zeal for change that would escalate into the 1980s, 1990s and beyond."
- Rachel Hurn, Studio Museum
"Jones's book is a timely reminder that the United States has seen massive internal displacement within living memory and could again. But, more important, it's also a credible affirmation that from such sudden, painful movements something new and whole might yet be made."
- Gary Dauphin, Artforum
"Both a scholarly triumph and a fascinating read, this book provides the backstory for some of the most consequential artists to emerge from the Black Arts Movement and examines the work, projects, and initiatives they fostered."
- Victoria L. Valentine, Culture Type
"<i>South of Pico</i> is of broad use to the field of contemporary art history, from specialists to undergraduate students in advanced survey courses. . . . One of the most urgent if unanticipated demands for which Jones’s study may be useful is the increasing problem in Los Angeles of gentrification and the intra-urban migrations it forces. If gentrification is enabled by ignorance of the relationship between geography and cultural history, Jones’s book might be deployed by contemporary cultural and social activists as a weapon against forgetting and for the continued protection of the material and immaterial cultural heritage that is sited in one of the city’s most significant areas—south of Pico."
- Natilee O. Harren, CAA Reviews
"A touchstone for future scholars and readers with current investments in how narratives of black artists and the history of American art are written."
- Bridget R. Cooks, Art Journal
"<i>South of Pico</i> is stunningly broad ranging and critically detailed in its peopling of a movement and in its thorough close reading and contextualizing of art practice and objects."
- Stephanie Leigh Batiste, Journal of American History
"<i>South of Pico</i> presents a finely detailed picture of the black art community as it emerged in 1960s Los Angeles and struggled to gain the means of self-representation."
- Ken D. Allan, Art Bulletin
"Thanks to Jones's relentless efforts to provide go-to comparisons, there is now absolutely no reasons why any classroom lecture or museum exhibition on American modernism should lack examples of Black artists.'
- Miguel de Baca, Art History
“<i>South of Pico</i> is a tour de force, a potent intervention into the histories of postwar art, Los Angeles, and Black America. It teaches us, against the legacy and perpetuation of institutional violence, the profound significance of African American art as solidarity, community action, and inspiration.”
- Michael Lang, Journal of African American History
"A landmark work and a great gift to contemporary art history."
- Hilton Als, The New Yorker