Wednesday, 12 July 2017

Art Exhibition On America’s Race Struggles Opens In London




Anew exhibition exploring the American Civil Rights movement and the politics of black identity in the US opened at London’s prestigious Tate modern museum on July 12.
   Titled, Soul of a Nation: Art of Black Power, the exhibition also examines the triumphs and tragedies of the civil rights movement in the United States from the 1960’s to 1980’s — at a time when black culture identity was shifting.
Set against a historic background beginning in 1963 with a quarter of a million people marching to the Lincoln Memorial to hear Martin Luther King’s ‘I have a dream’ speech, the exhibition draws on the works of over 60 artists many of them unknown, working during the period.
The exhibition’s 168 artworks encompasses many of the social movements including the Black Power and the Black Panthers aiming to put an end to racial segregation and discrimination.
Painters, sculptors and photographers joined in using their various skills to further the cause of equality.
Dresses and suits designed and made for women on the march by Jae Jarrell, a fashion designer and participant in the Black Arts Movement of the 60s are also on display at the exhibition.
In 1968, Jarrell co-founded AfriCOBRA, the African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists. Taking after her grandfather – a tailor, Jarrell produced garments to inspire African American communities. She describes a female suit created to be worn with comfort at civil rights marches but with a clear message.
“I have the tweed suit – the piece that I call revolutionary suit. It’s a classic tweed with an A-line skirt so that it allows for the movement of the march. I have bell sleeves that accent have that same kind of silhouette as the skirt and that enables you to arm. And We’ve accessorised that tweed suit with a bandolero in Kool-Aid colours,” she added.
Some of the works presented featured some key black figures, who used their platform to speak out against injustices faced by black people at the height of the civil rights movement.
One of them is the famous Andy Warhol’s iconic portrait of boxing

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