Autonomy, Activism and Art Direction

Page 30

DONALD RODNEY - 20 YEAR ANNIVERSARY (1961-1998).

RAHUL PATEL, ACADEMIC SUPPORT AND ASSOCIATE LECTURER, BA/MA CULTURE CRITICISM AND CURATION CSM (TW, 2016). Donald Rodney 1961-1998 It is 30 years since Donald Rodney died from sickle-cell anaemia aged 37. Rodney, with Eddie Chambers and Keith Piper, played a pivotal role in the development of the BLK Arts group*. He was an artist who had to fight against racism and in the art world for representation of his art and these struggles turned him into an art activist. He was dubbed as “one of the most innovative and versatile artists of his generation”. Donald Rodney’s sketchbooks which are in the Tate archive were recently exhibited at Tate Britain. His work has been used by Luke Willis Thompson who has been shortlisted for the 2018 Turner Prize. At the Devils Feast exhibition in April 1987 at Chelsea College of Art he with Keith Piper used his art to create a daring and creative installation highlighting the ‘injustice’ of the criminal justice institutions of Britain. Art is always been ‘political’ and nearly all artists have understood this. In every given period artistic experiments have been made by artists for their practice to speak out for change. In the late 1970s and 1980s the world of contemporary British arts seemed oblivious or even refused to acknowledge racism faced by black people. Rodney and his fellow black artists were determined to puncture this sham edifice of contemporariness of British art which failed to bring the contemporary into the body of art and in particular art schools. The Devils Feast exhibition offered a chance to give a voice. It was the first exhibition in a London higher education arts institution by black only artists. 30 // AUTONOMY, ACTIVISM & ART DIRECTION.

Inner city riots in the UK which broke out in Brixton in April 1981 but then spread across the country were a manifestation against police harassment of young black men. The subsequent fallout from the conduct of the state, judicial and education institutions was meant to signal a change in their relationship with young black men. However, supremely confident after their ‘pounding’ of the working-class mining communities during the Miners’ strike of 1984-85 the inner-cities police institutions returned back to their traditional form (racial and prejudicial) in dealing with all black communities. Two incidences sparked another set of riots in Brixton and in Tottenham in late 1985. The ferocity was even more then in 1981 and resulted in the death of a policeman. But incursion of the police into the homes of black families resulted in Joy Gardner in Tottenham dying and Cherry Groce in Brixton permanently injured and maimed by the police who shot her. This time it was also different because it was black women who were the target of the police. Pipers and Rodney’s The Next Turn of the Screw installation was probably the most thought-provoking, innovative and controversial piece at the Devils Feast exhibition. The installation was in response to the death of Clinton McCurbin in late February 1987 at the hands of the West Midlands police in Wolverhampton just over two months before the exhibition. The Wolverhampton, Birmingham and West Midland connection for the artists – where most the BLK Art Group had originated raised further anger as well as public outcry at what had taken place.


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Articles inside

Digital Resources

13min
pages 155-166

Further Reading

4min
pages 151-154

Bibliography

1min
pages 149-150

Key Terms

4min
pages 144-145, 147-148

It's Never East to Say Goodbye by Bee Smith

1min
pages 142-143

The Pedantic Inventor 1 by Andrew Hart

1min
pages 138-141

NY-LON by Favour Jonathan

3min
pages 134-137

Black Girl Series by Ryann L. Oakley

2min
pages 128-133

An Interview with Gold Maria Akanbi

7min
pages 124-127

Introspection Illusion by Bunmi Agusto

1min
pages 122-123

Diversity Reports by Kourtney Paul Stuart-Mason

2min
pages 114-121

Black Female Bodies by Shannon Bono

1min
pages 112-113

Retweet by Lois Majek-odunmi

1min
pages 108-111

Akwaaba. The Balancing Act: Being Both Black and British by Rose Ofori-Darkwah

1min
pages 106-107

Mercedes Lewis

3min
pages 104-105

The Modern Day Black Woman

1min
pages 100-103

Generica/Obamacare

1min
pages 96-99

Cherry by In\u00EAs Mour\u00E3o

1min
pages 92-95

I Don't See in Colour by Mercedes Lewis

8min
pages 84-91

2 Moons by Jonathan Fernandez

2min
pages 82-83

The 'Cool Black' by Gold Maria Akanbi

2min
pages 80-81

Motherhood (Series) by Sharon Foster

2min
pages 74-79

Base Head Jazz by Alaa Kassim

1min
pages 70-73

Arts 'Double Character' Rayvenn Shaleigha D'Clark

5min
pages 64-69

Blk. by Inës Mourão

1min
pages 58-63

Sam Nairobi (2017) by Awuor Onyango

1min
pages 56-57

House Party by Favour Jonathan

3min
pages 52-55

Tesifa (2019) by Mikael Calandra Achode

1min
pages 50-51

Agbogho II by Chizitalu "Chiizii" Uwechia

2min
pages 44-49

The Extraordinary Qualities of the Gaderene Swine by Tam Joseph

1min
pages 40-43

Body by Shannon Bono

1min
pages 38-39

Jason Sam (Antony)

1min
page 37

Inés Mourão

1min
page 36

Sankara (2018) by Ethel-Ruth Tawe

1min
pages 34-35

Key Term Video: Art Activism

1min
pages 32-33

Donald Rodney - 20 Year Anniversary (1961-1998)

3min
pages 30-31

For Us, By Us

1min
pages 24-29

Key Data

1min
pages 20-23

A Note from Richie Manu

5min
pages 17-19

A Note from Lawrence Lartey

5min
pages 14-16

Peer Review: Lawrence Lartey and Richie Manu

2min
pages 12-13

A Note From the Leads

4min
pages 8-11

Welcome.

4min
pages 1-3, 6-7
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