Rennie Collection, Vancouver, © Lubaina Himid
An exhibition at London's Tate Modern is exploring the work of Lubaina Himid, who in 2017 became the first Black woman to win the UK's prestigious Turner Prize. In the series of paintings called "Le Rodeur," Himid depicts abstractly how the horrors aboard a French slave ship in the 19th Century "still reverberate'' to this day. - Lubaina Himid - "Ball on Shipboard" (2018)
Tate, © Lubaina Himid
The artist was born in Zanzibar in 1954, moving to the UK as a baby with her British mother. This painting, from her "Revenge" series, is based on the 1877 work "Portsmouth Dockyard." Where James Tissot's original depicts a White British soldier and two women, Himid replaces the trio with two Black women dressed in African fabric. - Lubaina Himid - "Between the Two My Heart is Balanced" (1991)
© Nottingham Contemporary, photo Andy Keate, courtesy Lubaina Himid / Hollybush Gardens
Himid is a prominent member of the British Black Arts Movement, which began in the 1980s. "A Fashionable Marriage," a work from that period, took aim at then UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and US President Ronald Reagan, along with a "patronizing" arts establishment. - Lubaina Himid - "A Fashionable Marriage" (1986)
© Lubaina Himid
These works by Himid draw attention to the contribution of Black diasporas to the UK's history and culture. - Lubaina Himid - "Jelly Mould Pavillons for Liverpool" (2010)
Tate, © Lubaina Himid
This portrait of a subtly androgynous man, painted inside a drawer, is not Himid's first painting on reclaimed domestic materials. ''I want to enlarge, enliven, or activate the everyday,'' says the artist. - Lubaina Himid - "Man in a Shirt Drawer" (2017-18)
Lubaina Himid / Hollybush Gardens
The artist here re-interprets the bright kanga fabrics of East Africa, which are worn in two pieces wrapped around the body. ''I see kangas as an extra way of speaking, of speaking clothes if you like," she says. - Lubaina Himid - "There Could Be an Endless Ocean" (2018)
Lubaina Himid / Hollybush Gardens
''My father used to buy a whole set of kangas for my grandmother and her friends to go to weddings,'' recalled Himid. "Little traces of my background kind of keep me comfortable ... I like to talk about them and make work using them.'' - Lubaina Himid - "Metal Handkerchief - Saw/Flag" (2019)
Private Collection, © Lubaina Himid
''Most of the time the women in my paintings are planning and strategizing, working things out,'' explains Himid. The women here "are trying to plan a city ... that is safe enough for little girls to walk from their own houses to their grandma's houses." - Lubaina Himid - "The Operating Table" (2017-18)
Courtesy Yinka Shonibar/Cristea Roberts Gallery, © Yinka Shonibare
British Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare recently curated the Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy, in London. The colonial ship "The Mayflower" is here adorned in Shonibare's signature African batik fabric. This textile was manufactured by the Dutch, based on Indonesian designs, representing to the artist the complexity of colonial legacies. - Yinka Shonibare - "Mayflower, All Flowers" (2020)
Photo © Eric W. Baumgartner, Courtesy of Hirschl & Adler Modern
The Royal Academy exhibition featured the work of Bill Traylor, an artist and also a freed slave. "In a way, Bill Traylor has been the main inspiration for the entire project,'' said Shonibare. - Bill Traylor - "Man with Barking Dog" (Blue and Red Construction)
Photo: Matt Humphrey, Courtesy of Amoako Boafo
The exhibition included the works of emerging African artists. Hailing from Accra, Ghana, and currently based in Vienna, Amoako Boafo has recently shot to fame in the art world with his bold portraits of figures from African diasporas. - Amoako Boafo - "Fatou"
Annalisa Banello
The skin of the figures in portraits by Eddy Kamuanga are inscribed with what some critics have suggested to be circuit boards. Such products require the mineral coltan, which is extracted, sometimes exploitatively, from the artist's native Congo. - Eddy Kamuanga - "Oubliez le passé et vous perdez les deux yeux"
CNN  — 

In April 1819 a French slave ship called “Le Rodeur” departed West Africa for the Caribbean. On board were 22 crew, and around 160 enslaved Africans. In the cramped conditions aboard the ship, a debilitating disease broke out, rendering all the slaves and many of the crew blind. The French captain, calculating that his human cargo was worth more as an insurance payout, ordered weights to be attached to the feet of 36 enslaved Africans, who were thrown into the Atlantic Ocean.

It’s not immediately obvious, standing in a large gallery space in London’s Tate Modern, that the series of paintings by Lubaina Himid titled “Le Rodeur” speak to this horrifying incident. Her colorful images do not show a ship of enslaved people, but figures from different times, arranged in surreal scenes, such as a disjointed ball on the ship’s deck.

“I guess the most important thing in this painting is that nobody knows what’s happening,” said Himid, looking at her works, which give off an air of uncertainty. “These people come from all sorts of different eras, but they’re feeling the vibrations of that trauma,” she explained. “Those reverberations are still shaking us up in the room now, today.”

Sonal Bakrania/Photo ©Tate (Sonal Bakrania)
Lubaina Himid's series "Le Rodeur" at the Tate Modern, London.

‘Filling in the gaps in cultural history’

Five years ago Himid, who was born in Zanzibar, an archipelago off the coast of Tanzania, and moved to the UK as a baby with her British mother, became the first Black woman to win the prestigious British art award the Turner Prize. She has been exploring colonial legacies and fighting for Black representation in the arts her whole career. “I suppose what I’m trying to do is fill in the gaps in art history and fill in the gaps in cultural history,” she said.

Now, aged 68, Himid is back with a headline show at one of the UK’s biggest galleries.

While drawing on deep and painful themes, Himid’s work, as in “Le Rodeur,” is often understated in its subversion. Next to a giant sculpture of planks resembling a wave, with a recording of the sounds of the sea filling the air, is one of the paintings from her “Revenge” series from the 1990s. Azures of the sea and colorful shades from the dresses of the two women sat in a small boat pop from the canvas. This is “Between the Two My Heart is Balanced.”

Art historian Mora Beauchamp-Byrd points out how Himid’s painting is based on the 1877 work “Portsmouth Dockyard.” Where James Tissot’s original depicts a White British soldier sat between two female companions, Himid replaces the man with two Black women – a couple.

Tate, © Lubaina Himid
Lubaina Himid's "Between the Two My Heart is Balanced" (1991).

Beauchamp-Byrd believes that subverting and reframing colonial and gender narratives is part of Himid’s craft. ”I see this real studied engagement with art history,” she said. ”There’s a kind of rigor there … in terms of thinking about art from the past, but also in terms of really biting satire, that speaks to larger issues around diaspora and colonialism.”

Creating a dialogue

Himid’s exhibition comes as another headliner exploring colonialism and championing Black representation concludes. Across London, the 2021 Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy was curated by celebrated British Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare. He says it was the most diverse show in the 250 years of the institution. For three months, at the entrance to the gallery, a statue of its founder Joshua Reynolds greeted visitors, draped for the occasion in a colorful sash of African batik fabric.

Memories of a painful past echoed in the exhibition’s first room, which featured a collection of paintings and drawings by Bill Traylor. Born in the 1850s, Traylor was among the last generations of enslaved African Americans, and taught himself to paint and draw after gaining his freedom. “I wanted to have his work as the kind of starting point and the inspiration for the entire project … [he] was a self-taught artist, and he depicted his own community,” explained Shonibare. “The drawings are absolutely fascinating.”

In another room, one of Shonibare’s own works stood out – a sculptural figure wrapped head to toe in the artist’s signature Dutch wax fabric, or at least, up to the neck. The head of the sculpture was entirely different; a bronze Ife head, thought to date back to 15th century Nigeria. The intricate craftsmanship of the head was shocking to the first Europeans to view it a century ago, Shonibare said.

David Parry/David Parry/ Royal Academy of Arts/David Parry/ Royal Academy of Arts
Shonibare's "Unintended Sculpture (Donatello's David and Ife Head)" at the Royal Academy's Summer Exhibition 2021.

”When the sculpture was discovered in Nigeria,” the artist explained ”a Western anthropologist suggested that the Africans would not have made a work that beautiful in bronze – that’s something that Donatello would have made, the Italian Renaissance artists.” Poking fun at Eurocentric judgements of African art, Yinka placed the Ife head atop the classical body of a replica of Donatello’s statue “David.”

Shonibare has also used his platform as a celebrated artist to bring new and diverse voices into the art world. He began years ago by opening his studio in East London to emerging artists to show their work. Now, he is working to create a residency space in Lagos, Nigeria. ”I wanted to create a dialogue between artists from all over the world – Europe, Asia – with artists in Africa,” he explained. More recently, he created a collection of 50 sculptures, sold to help fund a fellowship for young artists of color at London’s upcoming V&A East arts museum.

The dialogue is already beginning at the Royal Academy, where the Summer exhibition played host to many emerging artists from Africa – with work from Ghanaian artist Amoako Boafo (who partnered with Dior in 2020) and Eddy Kamuanga from the Democratic Republic of Congo taking pride of place.

For Beauchamp-Byrd, who two decades ago curated a start-up exhibition on the work of Britain’s diasporic artists, major solo exhibitions such as Lubaina Himid’s at the Tate have been a long time coming. ”It feels like these artists are finally getting the recognition that they deserve,” she said.

Himid is also carefully optimistic: “Many things have changed, lots of things haven’t,” she said. “I think there’s a lot more listening going on. British institutions are listening more to what we’re saying.”

Lubaina Himid” will be at Tate Modern, London until July 3 2022.