Diaspora Artists
diaspora-artists.net was initiated by Eddie Chambers, as part of an ongoing project to research, collate and archive material relating to Black artists in Britain and elsewhere. Since 2008 the project has been developed in collaboration with the Digital Cultures Research Centre and Watershed and with support from Arts Council England. Karen Di Franco joined the project as Assistant Curator at the end of 2008 through additional funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), working in a lead role to digitise and catalogue the archive's material and develop the diaspora‚ artists.net web site.
This web site presents, through a searchable database, all the material that has been digitised to date. This project is very much seen as ongoing, with new material being added to the collection on a daily basis.
One of the most interesting features of British art history since the post World War II period has been the presence of increasing numbers of artists who have come into Britain from other parts of the world, such as Africa, Asia and the Caribbean. But despite career successes and various levels of visibility, many of these artists remained, arguably, primarily associated with the countries or regions of the world from which they came, rather than the country to which they migrated and in which they practised, for lesser or greater periods of time. By the later part of the 20th century new generations of British artists, for the most part, the sons and daughters of immigrants - were, like the pioneering generations before them, active in both the studio and the gallery. Again, despite career successes and various levels of visibility, many of these younger artists arguably remained primarily associated with the idea of difference, be that difference constructed around race, colour, culture, identity, experience, or whatever.
With only limited exceptions, for both generations of artists, what has in effect been a marginalising of their work has meant that Britain, art histories often run along self-referencing, or mutually exclusive lines. diaspora-artists.net seeks to challenge this by two principle means. Firstly, in its overall construction it avoids the use of identity labels that have, arguably, served to disassociate certain artists from the mainstream of visual arts activity in Britain. So this is not a Black artists web site. Nor is it a web site dedicated to artists of African, Asian or Caribbean background practising in Britain. It is instead a site dedicated to the histories of artists from a broad range of diasporic backgrounds who practised (and in many instances, continue to practice) in Britain. Some of these artists were born here, some were brought up here, and some came as art students or as practising artists. Because the site's emphasis is on diaspora, it includes, but is by no means limited to, those artists whose apparent, perceived or indeed declared difference has tended to disconnect them from (rather than connect them to) wider British art histories. diaspora-artists.net seeks to emphasise a global interplay from which relatively few artists, British or otherwise are exempt.
Secondly, the site seeks to present information and material on its artists in expansive and integrated ways. So users of the site will notice that information and material is presented in broader rather than narrower contexts. This in effect creates a networking, an exchange, a cross-referencing that at all times seeks to place any given artist or any given piece of information, into an expansive, rather than a reductive, range of contexts. In so doing, the site attempts not only to acknowledge what artists, curators, writers, and others have themselves attempted to do, in their contributions to visual arts activity and documentation. diaspora-artists.net also seeks to create an invaluable feel for the specific or broader context in which this activity was undertaken.
NB. The project image [right] is taken from diaspora-artists.net. Image credit: Yinka Shonibare: Odile and Odette 2, (still) 2005, high definition digital video, duration: 14 minutes, 28 seconds, edition of 6 + 2APs. Courtesy of the artist, Stephen Friedman Gallery (London) and James Cohan Gallery (New York).
