13/10/2022

Feature on 10 years of African art in London: With Grada Kilomba, Nu Barreto and Touria el Glaoui - BBC Culture

 

My first piece for BBC Culture: 



The slave ship in a London courtyard

A new installation of 140 blocks of wood summons up a forgotten history, writes Melissa Chemam.


Laid out on the stone courtyard of London's Somerset House, like the fossilised remains of a whale, there is the outline of a slave ship. Made up of 140 blocks of charred wood, it is O Barco / The Boat by Grada Kilomba, a Portuguese writer and interdisciplinary artist of African descent (from Sao Tome and Angola). Forming the shape of the bottom of a boat, the piece references the slave ships that carried for centuries millions of Africans, enslaved by European empires. The blocks also contain poems in six different languages, inscribed on the surface. "Addressing the history of European maritime expansion and colonisation, the piece invites the audience to consider forgotten stories and identities," the curators explain; the civil administration responsible for the British Royal Navy was once based at Somerset House.
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