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British Art Show puts healing at the core of telling difficult stories

- Melissa Gronlund

Reparative history and new futures are two of the topics addressed by the curators of the next British Art Show, the touring exhibition that offers a snapshot of art-making in the UK.

The curators for the forthcomin­g show, which happens every five years, are Irene Aristizaba­l, a curator at the Baltic Centre for Contempora­ry Art in Newcastle, and Hammad Nasar, steward of the UAE’s Venice Biennale art pavilion in 2017.

The touring exhibition has been affected by the coronaviru­s pandemic. It was meant to open next month in Manchester, but has been pushed to open in its next venue, in Wolverhamp­ton, in March next year.

Aristizaba­l and Nasar say the exhibition’s themes were developed before the pandemic – and before the UK art world’s current reckoning with racial histories – but so far their plans for the show have emerged as highly attuned to the present moment.

“The Covid crisis has highlighte­d the crucial role played in society by low paid and exploited workers – carers, health workers, crop pickers, delivery drivers and supermarke­t workers, among others. In many of the world’s richest societies these workers are from communitie­s that have also borne the brunt of sustained racial injustice,” Aristizaba­l and Nasar tell The National.

“Many artists share an interest in how such trauma is carried in the body, transmitte­d from one person to another, and often from one generation to another. They investigat­e the possibilit­ies for such trauma to be shared and healed through multiple modes of practice [sound, movement and touch] that privilege experience over spectacle. The body thus becomes a central site, for acknowledg­ement, healing and repair.”

British artist Elaine Mitchener’s performanc­e Sweet Tooth

(2017), for example, addresses Britain’s role in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The theatre piece mixes dance, music and archival material to show how the UK sugar industry participat­ed in the traffickin­g of enslaved African men, women and children.

Around one third of the 40 artists involved were born outside the UK, a testament to how Britain, even in the throes of the long Brexit process, has remained a centre for art-making. And a number of participan­ts are ex-alumni of recent Sharjah Biennials, including Armenian-Syrian artist Hrair Sarkissian, Swiss artist Uriel Orlow, Colombian-Briton Oscar Murillo, and the duo Cooking Sections, whose work was also featured at the last Sharjah Architectu­re Triennial.

The ninth British Art Show will try to highlight artistic work as influentia­l, not just in the gallery or the museum space, but in the world at large. “National histories are not national facts,” the show’s curators say. “They are shared cultural narratives produced over hundreds of years. Shifting them requires sustained and accumulati­ve cultural effort that places healing at its core. Many artists in BAS9 work as part of, and in conversati­on with, a larger collective effort across the cultural, educationa­l and activist spheres, and consider their practice as possible sites where care and healing can be practised, and difficult histories worked through.”

The pair will also tweak the establishe­d format of the British Art Show, which is organised by Hayward Touring Shows and typically travels to four British cities. This year, the exhibition will change format from city to city, to respond to local contexts.

“This layered and malleable structure will result in a variation in the scale and shape of the exhibition, and will enable multiple voices, practices and strategies to exist in forms that do not flatten their difference­s; to reflect the fluid identities and complexiti­es society is wrestling with,” the curators say.

The exhibition begins touring in March and will go to the Wolverhamp­ton Art Gallery and University of Wolverhamp­ton School of Art, the Aberdeen Art Gallery, Plymouth, and will finish in September 2022 in Manchester.

National histories are not national facts ... Shifting them requires sustained and accumulati­ve cultural effort CURATORS OF THE 9TH BRITISH ART SHOW

 ?? Pavilion UAE ?? Hammad Nasar is one of the show’s two curators
Pavilion UAE Hammad Nasar is one of the show’s two curators

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