In this week’s episode of HUTL, we’re talking art, access and representation with art historian, writer, curator and director of London’s Chisenhale Gallery Dr. Zoe Whitley.
We talk about the importance of seeing oneself reflected in culture and having teachers who create spaces for that exploration. We talk about Black women and their hair, about standards of beauty and representations of black women and beauty. We talk about the power of possibility having what’s possible reflected back at us. We talk about access, access to the arts, particularly with respect to her co-curation of the celebrated Soul of a Nation at the Tate Gallery. We talk about the arc of black consciousness from Negro, to Black, to African American - the Black Panther’s Stockley Carmichael becomes Kwame Ture - that being and becoming that Stuart Hall spoke about. We talk about the next generation of curators who are speaking to the world we’re in now. We talk about learning to rest, how rest is in fact an act of radical resistance and of course, we talk about music.
Instagram: @ZoeWhitley
Guest: Dr Zoe Whitley
Title: Who gets to be an artist?
Artists on playlist: Shameika Said, ft Fiona Apple; No Name, Rainforest; Lous and The Yakuza
Artist References
Harper’s Bazaar Article by Zoe Whitley
Vision and Justice Website
Denise Murelle - Posing Modernity The Black Model from Manet and Matisse to Today
NAFAD - National Association of Fashion and Accessories Designers in the National Museum of African American History and Culture Smithsonian
Tiona Nekkia McClodden - Website
Tricia Hersey the Nap ministry - Website
Joy Gregory - Autoportrait
Lubaina Himid - Cutting up the Guardian
Faith Ringgold’s Children’s books
Allison Glenn - https://www.promisewitnessremembrance.org/
Meg Onli - Art for Philadelphia
Languid Hands - Website
B.O.S.S - Instagram
Turner Prize Shortlist
Learn more about our Season 3 sponsors Airbnb and Project Lighthouse
www.airbnb.co.uk/against-discrimination
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