Daily Mail

Guide using museum tours to label Nelson a ‘white supremacis­t’

- By Miles Dilworth

brItAIN’s museums have traditiona­lly offered visitors the chance to appreciate our national treasures in all their glory.

but sell-out tours of our biggest museums and galleries are now claiming the artefacts represent ‘ the history of empire and genocide’.

they brand Lord Nelson a ‘ white supremacis­t’ and Elizabeth I a ‘slaver’.

Art historian Alice Procter, 23, who runs the tours, claims artefacts at institutio­ns such as the british Museum and the Victoria & Albert fell into british hands through ‘slavery’ and ‘looting’.

Her website the Exhibition­ist, declares: ‘there are bloody handprints on the gallery walls, and the bodies of slaves and colonised peoples in the foundation­s.’ Guests on her £11 tours are also asked to wear badges saying ‘Display It Like You stole It’. Australian Miss Procter has spoken on social media of needing to add more events after many sold out, with more than 300 tickets sold so far.

but this week London’s museums and galleries said they do not endorse the tours – while critics branded them ‘babyish and silly’.

Promotiona­l artwork for the tours includes a portrait of Lord Nelson with the words ‘white supremacis­t’ in red across it. similar works brand Queen Victoria a ‘thief’, Elizabeth I a ‘slaver’ and explorer Captain Cook an ‘invader’.

It comes after Historic England sparked outrage last week after tweeting a mocked-up photo of Nelson’s Column being destroyed by a wrecking ball.

Miss Procter attended the £19,260-a-year school in west Latymer London before Upper moving to the £37,740-a-year Westminste­r school, which counts Nick Clegg among its alumni. she is studying for a masters in material and visual culture at University College London.

Her tours of the british Museum highlight how the Gweagal Aboriginal­s shield by was Captain stolen Cook, from while her V&A tour shames displays of looted Abyssinian treasures, which are now subject to a restitutio­n claim. the tour of the National Gallery focuses on John Julius Angerstein, principal underwrite­r at Lloyd’s from 17901796, whose collection she claims ‘forms the core of the National Gallery today’. Miss Procter told the times the bank insured british slave ships, compensati­ng merchants and captains for the deaths of slaves at sea.

An event descriptio­n states: ‘In a country that’s repeatedly failed to come to terms with its colonial past ... we seek to resist triumphali­st nostalgia with art history. these tours focus on how major institutio­ns like the National Gallery and tate britain came into being against a backdrop of imperialis­m.

‘We’ll unravel the role colonialis­m played in shaping and funding these collection­s, looking at the broader material history of celebrated works.’

but tory MP and historian Kwasi Kwarteng slammed the tours as ‘sensationa­list’. He said: ‘to put 20th-century terms such as white supremacis­t on 18thcentur­y figures is not remotely scholarly. It’s babyish and silly ... there needs to be a debate about our historical figures but calling them abusive names is not the way to do it. It needs to be put in its proper context.’

the National Gallery said: ‘these tours are not organised by, or with, the input of the National Gallery and nor do we endorse them.’ It highlighte­d Angerstein’s role in the abolitioni­st movement as a founding member of the Committee for the relief of the black Poor.

the british Museum stressed the tours ‘are run externally and do not form part of the british Museum’s public programme offer’. the tate said it recently held an exhibition about art and the british empire, while the V&A said the museum’s ‘mission’ is to ‘encourage contempora­ry debate’ on historic collection­s. Miss Procter did not comment

‘This is babyish and silly’

 ??  ?? Accused: Promotiona­l artwork for the guided tours showing daubed portraits of Captain Cook, Elizabeth I and Nelson
Accused: Promotiona­l artwork for the guided tours showing daubed portraits of Captain Cook, Elizabeth I and Nelson
 ??  ?? Sell-out tours: Art historian Alice Procter, 23
Sell-out tours: Art historian Alice Procter, 23
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom