World is Africa: Writings on Diaspora Art

Author:   Eddie Chambers (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781350140325


Pages:   336
Publication Date:   14 January 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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World is Africa: Writings on Diaspora Art


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Overview

World is Africa brings together more than 30 important texts by Eddie Chambers, who for several decades has been an original and a critical voice within the field of African diaspora art history. The texts range from book chapters and catalogue essays, to shorter texts. Chambers focuses on contemporary artists and their practices, from a range of international locations, who for the most part are identified with the African diaspora. None of the texts are available online and none have been available outside of the original publication in which they first appeared. The volume contains several new pieces of writing, including a consideration of the art world 'fetishization' of the 1980s, as the manifestation of a reluctance to accept the majority of Black British artists as valid individual practitioners, choosing instead to shackle them to exhibitions that took place three decades ago. Another new text re-examines the ‘map paintings’ of Frank Bowling, the Guyana-born artist who was the subject of a major retrospective at Tate Britain in 2019. The third introduces the little-known record sleeve illustrations of Charles White, the American artist who was the subject of a major retrospective in 2018 at major galleries across the US. Among the other new texts is a critical reflection on the patronage the Greater London Council extended to Black artists in 1980s London. World is Africa makes a valuable contribution to the emerging discipline of black British art history, the field of African diaspora studies and African diaspora art history.

Full Product Details

Author:   Eddie Chambers (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Weight:   0.706kg
ISBN:  

9781350140325


ISBN 10:   1350140325
Pages:   336
Publication Date:   14 January 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Foreword, Patricia Bickers Acknowledgements Introduction Section One - On Art History, Institutions, and Academia 1 Section One, Introduction 2 The Harmful Consequences of Postblack 3 Africa 05: Polemic 4 Dead Artists’ Society 5 Black Artists and the Fetishisation of the 1980s 6 Black British Artists and Problems of Systemic Invisibility and Eradication: Creating Exhibition Histories of That Which Is Not There 7 Framing Black Art Section Two - History and Identity 8 Section Two, Introduction 9 ‘Handsworth Songs’ and the Archival Image 10 Black British and Other African Diaspora Artists Visualising Slavery 11 2000’s Got to be Black 12 Next We Change Earth 13 Keith Piper, Donald Rodney and the Artists’ Response to the Archive 14 Black British Photography Section Three - On Artists 15 Section Three, Introduction 16 Sokari Douglas Camp CBE 17 William Kentridge: The Main Complaint 18 Hurvin Anderson: Double consciousness 19 Jonathan Jones: untitled (the tyranny of distance) 20 Vanley Burke: An Inglan Story, An Inglan History 21 Helen Wilson: Painting for a Brighter Future 22 Barbara Walker: Private Face 23 Barbara Walker: It’s a Bit Much 24 Reviewpiece: Ajamu & Sunil Gupta 25 Pat Ward Williams: Isolated Incidents 26 Donald Rodney: Three Songs on Pain Light & Time 27 Ben Jones: In the Spirit, In the Flesh 28 Frank Bowling and the Enigma of Guyana 29 Charles White’s 10- and 12- Inch Vinyl Messages 30 Hew Locke’s Depictions of Royalty Section Four - Black Artists in History 31 Section Four, Introduction 32 Independence and Cultural Nationalism in Caribbean Art 33 Black Artists and the Greater London Council 34 Art and Society, Jonathan Greenland interview with Eddie Chambers Section Five – Criticize 35 Section Five, Introduction 36 Contemporary Art or Contemporary African Art?: The Inevitable Death of the Latter 37 Richard Hylton, The Nature of the Beast: Cultural Diversity and the Visual Arts Sector: A Study of Policies, Initiatives and Attitudes 1976 – 2006: Afterword 38 Elvan Zabunyan, Black is a Color (A History of African American Art): Book review 39 “Black My Story, (Museum de Paviljoens, Netherlands, 2003): Book review 40 Criticize: Press Responses to Black Art an’ done and The Pan-Afrikan Connection exhibitions Section Six – Outernational 41 Section Six, Introduction 42 Àsìkò Goes Outernational 43 Jamaica Goes Outernational Index

Reviews

For decades, Eddie Chambers has been synonymous with incisive writing on Afro-Diasporic sonic and visual culture. True to form, the wide-ranging essays in World is Africa - from the aesthetic politics of the 1980s to jazz record sleeves to contemporary art - are at once precise and polemical. This is a vital companion to 1999's Run Through the Jungle, and introduces readers to Chambers's capacious intellectual practice - as pressing as ever, his writing elaborates the ongoing project of righting art history's many elisions. World is Africa is essential reading for anyone interested in Black Atlantic culture and the ever-shifting landscape of diaspora scholarship. -- Ian Bourland, Assistant Professor, Department of Art & Art History, Georgetown University, USA. With Run Through the Jungle, and Things Don Change, Eddie Chambers established himself as perhaps the most trenchant and tenacious commentator on British art of the last two decades. World is Africa should leave no one in doubt about his unmatched authority in the field of Black Diaspora art criticism. -- Chika Okeke-Agulu, Professor, African and American Diaspora Art, Princeton University, USA.


Author Information

Eddie Chambers is Professor in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Texas at Austin, USA. He has been writing about African Diaspora and Black British art practices for several decades and his scholarship includes Black Artists in British Art (I. B. Tauris, 2014) and Roots and Culture: Cultural Politics in the Making of Black Britain (I. B. Tauris, 2016).

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