The BLK Art Group was the name chosen in 1982 by a group of five influential conceptual artists, painters, sculptors and installation artists based in England. Keith Piper, Marlene Smith, [1] Eddie Chambers [2] and Donald Rodney were initially based in the Midlands.
The group were all from the British African-Caribbean community and exhibited in a number of group exhibitions in both small and prestigious galleries throughout the country. Their work was noted for its boldly political stance, producing dynamic conceptual art that offered a series of inventive critiques on the state of inter-communal, class and gender relations in the UK. [3] They were themselves influenced by a variety of artistic currents including ideas associated with the USA's Black Arts Movement. Donald Rodney, who suffered from sickle cell anaemia (anemia), died aged 36 in 1998.
In 1979, Eddie Chambers founded a group known as the Wolverhampton Young Black Artists. [4]
In 1981, Chambers curated an exhibition, Black Art & Done, at the Wolverhampton Art Gallery, which gave a focus to issues concerning the black community, including racial prejudice. [5] Participating artists included Dominic Dawes, Ian Palmer, Andrew Hazel and Keith Piper. [4]
The group exhibited from 1982–83 in The Pan-Afrikan Connection, touring to Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, Trent Polytechnic in Nottingham; King Street Gallery in Bristol; and the Africa Centre in London and The `Herbert Gallery in Coventry. In 1983–84 the touring exhibition The BLK Art Group was held at the Herbert Art Gallery in Coventry, Battersea Arts Centre and again the Africa Centre. [6] In 1988 Eddie Chambers curated the exhibition Black Art: Plotting the Course. [7]
The group's critique of the institutional racism of Britain's art world was part of the impetus that led to The Other Story , a seminal survey of African and Asian artists curated by Rasheed Araeen at London's Hayward Gallery in 1989, [8] as well as the founding of the Association of Black Photographers and the establishment of Iniva, the Institute of International Visual Art. [9] Piper and Chambers themselves have both gone on to achieve veteran status as educators, writers and curators. [10]
In 2011, the Blk Art Group Research Project was set up by Keith Piper, Claudette Johnson and Marlene Smith. [11]
Eddie Chambers has argued that despite their undoubted creativity and social relevance, the group suffered from the general lack of serious critical attention given to black artists by the British arts media. [12] Nevertheless, their enthusiasm and commitment to making art relevant to everyday life ensured that they were a strong influence on the later generation of black British artists that included Young British Artists (YBA) such as Chris Ofili and Steve McQueen, both of whom went on to win Turner Prizes, while maintaining a clear political element to their work. [3]
Into the Open, subtitled "New Paintings, Prints and Sculptures by Contemporary Black Artists", was an exhibition of art by black artists displayed at various venues in the United Kingdom in 1984.
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Keith Piper is a British artist, curator, critic and academic. He was a founder member of the groundbreaking BLK Art Group, an association of black British art students, mostly based in the West Midlands region of the UK.
Donald Gladstone Rodney was a British artist. He was a leading figure in Britain's BLK Art Group of the 1980s and became recognised as "one of the most innovative and versatile artists of his generation." Rodney's work appropriated images from the mass media, art and popular culture to explore issues of racial identity and racism.
Bisi Silva was a Nigerian contemporary art curator based in Lagos.
Eddie Chambers is a British contemporary art historian, curator and artist, who is Department of Art and Art History professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
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Claudette Elaine Johnson is a British visual artist. She is known for her large-scale drawings of Black women and her involvement with the BLK Art Group, of which she was a founder member. She was described by Modern Art Oxford as "one of the most accomplished figurative artists working in Britain today". A finalist for the Turner Prize in 2024, Johnson was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts the same year.
Errol Lloyd is a Jamaican-born artist, writer, art critic, editor and arts administrator. Since the 1960s he has been based in London, to which he originally travelled to study law. Now well known as a book illustrator, he was runner-up for the Kate Greenaway Medal in 1973 for his work on My Brother Sean by Petronella Breinburg.
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Nina Edge is an English ceramicist, feminist and writer.
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