ISBN:
9781849767651
,
1849767653
Language:
English
Pages:
271 Seiten
,
27 cm
DDC:
700.9/045
Keywords:
Postcolonialism and the arts Exhibitions
;
Postcolonialism and the arts Exhibitions
;
Imperialism in art Exhibitions
;
Exhibitions
;
Imperialism in art
;
International relations
;
Postcolonialism and the arts
;
Art
;
Caribbean Area Exhibitions Relations
;
Great Britain Exhibitions Relations
;
Great Britain In art
;
Caribbean Area In art
;
Caribbean Area
;
Great Britain
;
Bildband
;
Ausstellungskatalog Tate Britain 01.12.2021-03.04.2022
;
Großbritannien
;
Beziehung
;
Karibik
;
Kunst
;
Postkolonialismus
;
Geschichte 1950-
Abstract:
Anew: to the future, via the past / Alex Farquharson -- Caribbean movements in Britain / David A. Bailey -- Stuart Hall's vernacular modernism / David Scott -- Nature erupts into orchestras of nemesis: the ecological imaginary of the Caribbean / Giulia Smith -- Colour bars and bass cultures, dub aesthetics and Cockney translations: music in the Creole history of Black life in Britain / Paul Gilroy -- Movement of people / a rhythm sequence by Grace Wales Bonner -- Comin rite thru: masquerade and marches, resistance and revolution / Allison Thompson -- Home and away: odysseys, entanglements and acts of resistance / Gilane Tawadros -- Hostile environments and Black geographies / Daniella Rose King.
Abstract:
"This fascinating exhibition book traces the connection between Britain and the Caribbean in the visual arts from the 1950s to today, a social and cultural history more often told through literature or popular music. It celebrates how people from the Caribbean have forged new communities and identities in post-war Britain - and in doing so have transformed British culture and society. ...Arranged chronologically, it sheds light on a number of themes such as Caribbean modernism, social and political struggles, subculture and its policing, the front room as a private and public space, after-images of slavery and the Middle Passage, and syncretic and creolised metaphor and allegory (carnival, folklore, new world religions). Readers will find themselves charting a course between two worlds: London or other urban localities in the UK and images of formerly British Caribbean nations."
Note:
Published on the occasion of the exhibition Life between islands : Caribbean-British art 1950s - now held at the Tate Britain, London 1 December 2021-3 April 2022
,
Print on demand edition
,
Includes bibliographical references (page 259) and index
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