John Akomfrah | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Portsmouth University |
Occupation(s) | Film director, artist, curator |
Years active | 1986–present |
Notable work | Handsworth Songs (1986) Seven Songs for Malcolm X (1993) The Unfinished Conversation (2013) Purple (2017) |
Awards | Artes Mundi Prize |
Website | www |
Sir John Akomfrah CBE RA (born 4 May 1957) [1] is a Ghanaian-born British artist, writer, film director, screenwriter, theorist and curator of Ghanaian descent, whose "commitment to a radicalism both of politics and of cinematic form finds expression in all his films". [2]
A founder of the Black Audio Film Collective in 1982, he made his début as a director with Handsworth Songs (1986), which examined the fallout from the 1985 Handsworth riots. [3] Handsworth Songs went on to win the Grierson Award for Best Documentary in 1987. [4]
With Lina Gopaul and David Lawson, his long-term producing partners, Akomfrah co-founded Smoking Dogs Films in 1998.
In the words of The Guardian , he "has secured a reputation as one of the UK's most pioneering film-makers [whose] poetic works have grappled with race, identity and post-colonial attitudes for over three decades." [5] In the 2023 New Year Honours, he was the recipient of a knighthood in recognition of his services to the Arts. [6]
Akomfrah was chosen to represent Britain at the Venice Biennale in 2024. [7]
John Akomfrah was born in Accra, Dominion of Ghana, to parents who were involved with anti-colonial activism. In an interview with Sukhdev Sandhu, Akomfrah said: "My dad was a member of the cabinet of Kwame Nkrumah's party.... We left Ghana because my mum's life was in danger after the coup of 1966, and my father died in part because of the struggle that led up to the coup." [2] This struggle goes in ties with the imbalance of his identity that he expresses in his "Conversations with Noise" that was part of the Five Murmurations (2021). Akomfrah was educated in British schools since around the age of eight. His excellence as a student led him to showcase this struggle with this imbalance between Britain's colonization and his identity.
He was an influential creator in 1982, founding the Black Audio Film Collective, which was discontinued in 1998. In this organization, he and others focused on the backlash the Black community in Britain received and the mental toll of their identities being affected. In his films, Akomfrah experimented with sound to display the struggles the Black community in Britain face.
In 1998, together with Lina Gopaul and David Lawson, his long-term producing partners, Akomfrah founded Smoking Dogs Films. [8]
From 2001 to 2007, he served as a Governor of the British Film Institute. [9] From 2004 to 2013, he served as a governor of the film organisation Film London. [10]
Akomfrah has taught multiple courses at academic institutions, including Massachusetts Institute of Technology, [11] Brown University, New York University, Westminster University, and Princeton University. A tri-campus three-day event entitled "Cinematic Translations: The Work of John Akomfrah" was held in November 2013 at the University of Toronto, where he was artist-in-residence. [12] A Harvard Film Archive critique of his work states: "Akomfrah has become a cinematic counterpart to such commentators of and contributors to the culture of the Black diaspora as Stuart Hall, Paul Gilroy, Greg Tate and Henry Louis Gates. In doing so, he has continued to mine the audiovisual archive of the 20th century, recontextualizing these images not only by selecting and juxtaposing them but also through the addition of eloquent and allusive text." [13]
Akomfrah's works are included in permanent collections of museums worldwide, including the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Pérez Art Museum Miami, [14] the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, among others.
On 24 January 2023, it was announced that Akomfrah would represent the UK at the 60th Venice Biennale in 2024. [15]
Akomfrah has had solo presentations at Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (2022), [16] Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (2019), [17] Bildmuseet in Umeå, Sweden (2015), Broad Art Museum, East Lansing (2014), Tate Britain, London (2013), Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2012), the Museum of Modern Art, New York (2011) and the British Film Institute, in the BFI Gallery (2010). [18]
In 2013, his major work The Unfinished Conversation , a multi-layered installation, was shown in Tate Britain for six months in 2013, and was acquired for the National Collection. [19] Marking its 10th anniversary, The Unfinished Conversation was remounted at the Midlands Arts Centre as part of the Birmingham 2022 festival. [20]
His 2015 work, Vertigo Sea, is a three-screen film installation that was shown at the 56th Venice Biennale in May 2015. [21] [19] Vertigo Sea premiered in the UK at the Arnolfini in Bristol (16 January–10 April 2016) [22] coinciding with an exhibition of new and recent work by Akomfrah being shown at Lisson Gallery. [23] In October 2016, his 40-minute two-screen video installation Auto Da Fé, filmed in Barbados and inspired by the theme of 400 years of migration and religious persecution, went on show. [19] Vertigo Sea premiered in the UK at the Arnolfini in Bristol (16 January–10 April 2016) [22] coinciding with an exhibition of new and recent work by Akomfrah being shown in Cardiff. [24]
Purple (2017), a 62-minute, six-screen video installation commissioned for the prominent Curve Gallery space at the Barbican, London, Akomfrah describes as "a response to [the] Anthropocene". [25] A tie-in series of film screenings comprising selections made by Akomfrah was held from October 2017 at the Barbican Cinema. [26] The installation has travelled to the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid; Bildmuseet Umeå, Sweden; the Boston Institute of Contemporary Art, Massachusetts; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, in Washington, DC; and Museu Coleção Berardo, Lisbon. [27] [28] [17] [16]
Following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the worldwide George Floyd protests in 2020, Akomfrah began working on Five Murmurations (2021), a 55-minute, three-screen video, as a visual response to his sense that "it felt like there were almost two pandemics, overlapping, jostling and clashing with each other." [29] Akomfrah premiered the film in a solo presentation at Lisson Gallery in New York in 2021. [29] The film has since been shown in solo presentations at the Centraal Museum, Utrecht, in 2022; [30] and the National Museum of African Art, Washington, D.C., in 2023. [31]
In 2023, in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, Akomfrah debuted a new five-channel work titled Arcadia. Reflecting on The Columbian Exchange – the widespread transfer of plants, animals, precious metals, commodities, populations, technology, diseases and ideas between the Americas, Afro-Eurasia and Europe from the 1400s onwards – the film was shown at the Sharjah Biennial, before receiving its UK premiere at The Box in Plymouth where was on show until 2th June, 2024.
Akomfrah was appointed as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2008 New Year Honours for services to the film industry. [32] In March 2012, he was awarded the European Cultural Foundation's Princess Margaret Award. [33]
In 2013, he was awarded honorary doctorates from University of the Arts London [34] and from Goldsmiths, University of London. [35] [36] In 2014, he was awarded an honorary doctorate from Portsmouth University, the reformed polytechnic from which he had graduated in 1982. [37] [38]
In 2017, Akomfrah won the biennial Artes Mundi Prize, the UK's biggest award for international art, [39] having been chosen for the award for his "substantial body of outstanding work dealing with issues of migration, racism and religious persecution", including his work Auto Da Fé. [24] Akomfrah said of his winning two-screen video installation, which explores the theme of mass migration over a 400-year period: "I wanted to focus on the fact that many people have to leave because something terrible is happening, it’s not just about leaving for a better life, many people feel they have to leave to have a life at all." [40]
Akomfrah was appointed as a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2017 Birthday Honours for services to art and film making. [41] He was named Artist of the Year in the 2018 Apollo Magazine Awards. [42] He was elected a Royal Academician in 2019. [43]
He was knighted in the 2023 New Year Honours for services to the arts. [6] [44]
Douglas Gordon is a Scottish artist. He won the Turner Prize in 1996, the Premio 2000 at the 47th Venice Biennale in 1997 and the Hugo Boss Prize in 1998. He lives and works in Berlin, Germany.
Wolfgang Tillmans is a German photographer. His diverse body of work is distinguished by observation of his surroundings and an ongoing investigation of the photographic medium’s foundations.
Lawrence Charles Weiner was an American conceptual artist. He was one of the central figures in the formation of conceptual art in the 1960s. His work often took the form of typographic texts, a form of word art.
William Rodney Graham was a Canadian visual artist and musician. He was closely associated with the Vancouver School.
John Aubrey Clarendon Latham, was a Northern Rhodesian-born British conceptual artist.
Tony Oursler is an American multimedia and installation artist married to Jacqueline Humphries. He completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the California Institute for the Arts, Valencia, California, in 1979. His art covers a range of mediums, working with video, sculpture, installation, performance, and painting. He lives and works in New York City.
Pierre Bismuth is a French artist and filmmaker based in Brussels. His practice can be placed in the tradition of conceptual art and appropriation art. His work uses a variety of media and materials, including painting, sculpture, collage, video, architecture, performance, music, and film. He is best known for being among the authors of the story for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), for which he won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay alongside Michel Gondry and Charlie Kaufman. Bismuth made his directorial debut with the 2016 feature film Where is Rocky II?.
Doug Aitken is an American multidisciplinary artist. Aitken's body of work ranges from photography, print media, sculpture, and architectural interventions, to narrative films, sound, single and multi-channel video works, installations, and live performance. He currently lives in Venice, California, and New York City.
Christian Jankowski is a German contemporary multimedia artist who largely works with video, installation and photography. He lives and works in Berlin and New York.
Shirazeh Houshiary is an Iranian-born English sculptor, installation artist, and painter. She lives and works in London.
Enrico David is an Italian artist based in London. He works in painting, drawing, sculpture and installation, at times employing traditional craft techniques. In the 1990s, he garnered acclaim for creating monumental embroidered portraits using sewn canvases, which often began as drawings and collages from fashion magazines. During the past several years, David focused on sculpture in a variety of media and returned to more traditional methods of painting. His recent works include large-scale portraits of deeply psychological meaning. Drawing continues to be an important element of his practice.
Julian Rosefeldt is a German artist and film-maker. Rosefeldt's work consists primarily of elaborate, visually opulent film and video installations, often shown as panoramic multi-channel projections. His installations range in style from documentary to theatrical narrative.
Gerard Byrne is an Irish artist. He works primarily in film, video and photography in large-scale installations which reconstruct imagery found in magazine published in the 1970s through the 1980s.
The second Handsworth riots took place in the Handsworth district of Birmingham, West Midlands, from 9 to 11 September 1985. The riots were reportedly sparked by the arrest of a man near the Acapulco Cafe, Lozells and a police raid on the Villa Cross public house in the same area. Hundreds of people attacked police and property, looting and smashing, even setting off fire bombs.
The Black Audio Film Collective (BAFC), founded in 1982 and active until 1998, comprised seven Black British and diaspora multimedia artists and film makers: John Akomfrah, Lina Gopaul, Avril Johnson, Reece Auguiste, Trevor Mathison, Edward George and Claire Joseph. Joseph left in 1985 and was replaced by David Lawson. The group initially came together as students at Portsmouth Polytechnic, and after graduation relocated to Hackney in east London.
Tandis Jenhudson is a Emmy-nominated British composer, musician and medical doctor, best known for his work on film and television soundtracks. He has also received two Royal Television Society award nominations and is the first composer to have been honoured as a BAFTA Breakthrough Brit.
Handsworth Songs is a 1986 British documentary film directed by John Akomfrah and produced by Lina Gopaul. It was filmed during the 1985 riots in Handsworth and London. The production company was the Black Audio Film Collective, who also wrote the screenplay. With cinematography by Sebastian Shah and music by Trevor Mathison, there were voice-overs by Pervais Khan, Meera Syal, Yvonne Weekes, Sachkhand Nanak Dham and Mr. McClean.
Wael Shawky is an Egyptian artist working between Alexandria and Philadelphia. Shawky gained international recognition for his works that trace the history of the Crusades through a Middle Eastern lens. Shawky has won many awards and prizes for his work, including the Ernst Schering Foundation Art Award in 2011 and the Mario Merz Prize (2015) for his film trilogy, Al Araba Al Madfuna. He is represented by Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Galleria Lia Rumma and Lisson Gallery.
Purple is a 62-minute immersive six-channel video installation created by the British artist and filmmaker John Akomfrah in 2017. It draws from hundreds of hours of archival footage and combines with newly shot film, spoken word, and original music to explore climate change and its effects on human communities, biodiversity and the wilderness. It is divided into five movements and includes locations such as Alaska, Greenland, New York, Mumbai, rural Scotland, Tahiti and the Marquesas Islands in the South Pacific.
Vertigo Sea is a 48-minute immersive three-channel video installation created by the British artist and filmmaker John Akomfrah in 2015. It is a meditation on man's relationship with the sea and explores issues including the history of slavery, migration, conflict, and ecological concerns such as whale and polar bear hunting and nuclear testing. It combines original footage filmed on the Isle of Skye, the Faroe Islands and the Northern regions of Norway, with archival material primarily from the BBC Natural History Unit. It also draws inspiration from two literary works: Moby-Dick by Herman Melville and the poem Whale Nation by Heathcote Williams. It premiered at the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015 which was curated by Okwui Enwezor.