Tag Archives: Art

SEN News on Sunday: January 5 – 12, 2014

Revisiting La Tene Art: Ideas of Ethnicity and Diaspora

 

  • Myanmar Times (11/01/14) reports on the complaints of the Rohingya ethnic minority, who have called for a change in the national census categories.
  • Think Progress (10/01/14) questions whether the United Nations (UN) is flaming the fans of ethnic conflict in South Sudan by separating ethnic groups.
  • Heritage Daily (January 2014) features an article exploring whether La Tène art should be considered an ethnic indicator of early Celtic identity.

 

 

News compiled by Karen Seegobin.

If you would like to write a response to any of these news stories, please email us at sen@lse.ac.uk.

SEN Journal Online Exclusives – ‘Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Education’ (2): Art Education and National Identity in Late Nineteenth Century Denmark

Next up in our special series on Nationalism and Education, from the SEN Online archives we have…
……………………………………………………
‘Pedagogy, Provocation, and Paradox: Denmark’s Kunstnernes Studieskole’, by Kerry Greaves (Volume 13, Issue 3, December 2013, 373-393), which deals with the role of late nineteenth century Danish art education in forming a specifically Danish form of modernism, influenced by the prevailing social-democratic ideas of the period.
………………………………………………
‘The last two decades of the nineteenth century witnessed an apparent revolution in art education in Denmark with the establishment of the ‘Free Schools’, a group of alternative schools that provided students with a choice other than the Royal Academy. The most important of these schools, Kunstnernes Studieskole (The Artists’ Study School, established 1882), was subsidised by the government and headed by Laurits Tuxen, P. S. Krøyer and Kristian Zahrtmann, Academy-trained artists who modeled the school’s education on the French atelier system. The debate that formed the Study School was at its core one of democratisation, which was perceived to be synonymous with international modernism. Yet its artists functioned within a network of fluid roles designed to openly augment the existing pedagogical structure from within—a specifically Danish phenomenon. This article proposes an alternative framework for late-nineteenth-century Danish art education systems that situates the Study School within the context of Danish culture and as an extension of the social democratic tendencies proliferating at this time, which were significantly influenced by the preacher N. F. S. Grundtvig. Danish artists’ actual situation had more to do with assimilating a myriad of local and international impulses into a specifically Danish version of modernism.’

 

SEN News on Sunday: July 20-28, 2013

http://moderntokyotimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/taikanart4.jpg

  • Russia Beyond the Headlines (28/07/13) reports on Russia’s new 28-point strategy to deal with the country’s ethnic conflict, entitled  “Strategy of the State National Policy of the Russian Federation for the period up to 2025”.
  • New York Times (23/07/13) analyzes the nationalism of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, in light of the landslide victory of his Liberal Democratic Party in recent parliamentary elections.

Continue reading

Narrating the Road to, and Reality of, Multicultural Britain

This article follows the series on Art and nationalism.

T06947Two specific exhibits in London’s galleries have sought to tell the story of  the emergence of multicultural Britain, depicting a nation which journeyed through slavery, its abolition and the recognition of the new ‘natives’ of Britain: those of African and Indian descent, to arrive at a much glorified example of multi-cultural coexistence.

The first exhibit of significance, a permanent one, is at the National Portrait Gallery, an ‘Abolition Trail’1 addresses the reality of the individuals who perpetuated the slave trade and colonialism, as well as the political processes and activism which led to the abolition of slavery. It features the portrait of Ayuba Suleiman Diallo2, the earliest portrait of a freed slave and public figure, for which the gallery initiated a fund-raising campaign in 2010. Also, one can see the commemorative large scale painting “The Anti-Slavery Society Convention”3, 1840 by Benjamin Robert Haydon which is part of a narrative of reform and abolitionist movements in Britain. The newly commissioned portrait of Lord Ali in his robes on the ground floor presents us with the conclusion to the story of race relations in Britain, a black/ brown man reaching the heights of institutional belonging4.

Tate Britain meanwhile featured a non-permanent collection Art

Maud Sulter 1960-2008Polyhymnia (from the Zabat series)

Maud Sulter 1960-2008
Polyhymnia (from the Zabat series)

Displays: Thin Black Line(s)5, exhibited from 22 August 2011 – 18 March 2012.  It featured Lubaina Himid and Ingrid Pollard and is part of the gallery’s “one-room Focus Displays” which highlight “a theme or period of British art, using works from the Tate Collection”. This one represented the subaltern consciousness amongst black and Indian citizens of the new Britain, particularly women, in the aftermath of the end of colonialism. The paintings reflected upon Britain’s colonial past and a search for ‘roots’ and identity on the side of the artists.

Finally, the Tate Modern features two impressive paintings that juxtapose the classical art thematic of nudity and voyeurism with black subjects, reminding us of the usual absence of these bodies in early ‘high’ art and welcoming the possible discomfort that viewers might experience6.

In all the various displays present some of the ways in which the public space of the gallery is used as a tool for integrating the stories of Britain and multicultural Britain within a symbolic public arena, the gallery.

The paintings, in-depth description of the artist and subject matter can be seen in the gallery links below, copyright prevents us from featuring them here.

1. Abolition Trail at the National Portrait Gallery

2. Ayuba Suleiman Diallo display

Appeal for Ayuba Suleiman Diallo portrait in the Guardian newspaper

3. The National Slavery Convention 1840

4. Waheed in Lord’s robes 2009 by Julian Opie

5. ‘Thin Black Lines’ exhibition review

BP British Art Displays: Thin Black Line(s) (22 August 2011  –  18 March 2012)

This display focuses on the contribution of Black and Asian women artists to British art in the 1980s. Taking as its starting point three seminal exhibitions curated by artist Lubaina Himid in London from 1983 to 1985, the display charts the coming to voice of a radical generation of British artists who challenged their collective invisibility in the art world and engaged in their art with the wider social and political issues of 1980s Britain and the world.

In the early 1980s three exhibitions in London curated by Lubaina Himid – Five Black Women at the Africa Centre (1983), Black Women Time Now at Battersea Arts Centre (1983-4) and The Thin Black Line at the Institute for Contemporary Arts (1985) – marked the arrival on the British art scene of a radical generation of young Black and Asian women artists. They challenged their collective invisibility in the art world and engaged with the social, cultural, political and aesthetic issues of the time.

This display features a selection of key works by some of these artists. At their core is a conceptual re-framing of the image of black and Asian women themselves. Drawing on multiple artistic languages and media, these works repositioned the black female presence from the margins to the centre of debates about representation and art making.

( cited from the now gone description on the site, as well as from the curatorial text)

6.  Family Jules: NNN (No Naked Niggahs) by Barkley L. Hendricks

Agosta, the Pigeon-Chested Man, and Rasha, the Black Dove by Christian Schad

Open to the public: “The Story of the Government Art Collection”

As part of the series on “Art and Nationalism in London Museums”, we’ve been looking at the ways in which museums tell a story about ‘who we are’. Away from the masses, another less public story of who we are can be observed in the “The Story of the Government Art Collection” in the Pat Matthews Gallery, The Whitechapel Gallery. For the period, 3 March-2 September 2012 the general public has the chance to peek into this elite domain, hear the story of the art which the state sees as appropriate to accompany its endeavor.

http://whitechapelgallery.org/exhibitions/the-story-of-the-government-art-collection