Dalal-Clayton, Anjalie (2015) Coming into View: Black British Artists and Exhibition Cultures, 1976-2010. PhD thesis, Liverpool John Moores University.
Type of Research: | Thesis |
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Creators: | Dalal-Clayton, Anjalie |
Description: | This study unitesthe burgeoning academic field of exhibition histories and the critiques of race-based exhibition practices that crystallised in Britain inthe 1980s and 1990s. It concernsrecent practices of presenting and contextualising black creativity in British publicly funded art museums and galleries that are part of a broader attempt to increase the diversity of histories and perspectives represented in public art collections and exhibitions. The research focuseson three concurrent 2010 exhibitionsthat aimed to offer a non-hegemonic reading of black creativity through the use of non-art-historical conceptual and alternative curatorial models:Afro Modern (Tate Liverpool), Action(The Bluecoat), and a retrospective of works by Chris Ofili (Tate Britain). Comparative exhibitions of the past were typically premised on concepts of difference that ultimatelyresulted in the notional separation of black artists from mainstream discourses on contemporary art and histories of British art. Through a close and critical textual analysis of these three recent exhibitions, which is informed by J.L. Austin’s theory of speech acts (1955), the study considers whether, and to what extent the delimiting curatorial practices of the past have been successfully abandoned by public art museums and galleries, and furthermore, whether it has been possible for British art institutions to reject the entrenched, exclusive conceptions of British culture that negated black contributions to thecanon and narratives of British art in the first place. The exhibition case studies are complemented and contextualised by an in-depth history of the Bluecoat’s engagement with black creativity between 1976 and 2012, which provides a particular insight into the ways that debates about representation, difference and separatism have impacted the policies and practices of one culturally significant art gallery that is frequently overlooked in histories of black British art. With reference to the notion of legitimate coercion as defined by ZygmuntBauman (2000), the study determines that long-standing hegemonic structures continue to inform the modes through which public art museums and galleries in Britain curate and control black creativity |
Official Website: | http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/4356/1/158180_Anjalie%20Dalal-Clayton%20-%20Final%20PhD%20Thesis%20-%202015-09-29.pdf |
Additional Information (Publicly available): | Open access: http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/4356/1/158180_Anjalie%20Dalal-Clayton%20-%20Final%20PhD%20Thesis%20-%202015-09-29.pdf |
Keywords/subjects not otherwise listed: | Exhibition Histories, Institutional Histories, Institutional Practices |
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Chelsea College of Arts Research Centres/Networks > Decolonising Arts Institute |
Date: | 31 July 2015 |
Related Publications: | Bluecoat, Liverpool: The UK's first arts centre (Liverpool University Press, 2020) |
Date Deposited: | 16 Jun 2020 14:22 |
Last Modified: | 16 Jun 2020 14:29 |
Item ID: | 15777 |
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/15777 |
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