Artists’ Legacies in the Museum

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Alinta Sara looking at the archive of Donald Rodney at Iniva. Film still courtesy of Ada Cotton.

Artists’ Legacies in the Museum is an ambitious project run in collaboration with the International Curators Forum, engaging independent curators and museum curatorial teams with the archives of Vanley Burke, Donald Rodney and Maud Sulter, to help recalibrate how museums collect, share and preserve art and cultural heritage for the present and future.

Museum participants took part in three Study Days delivered by independent Curators, who are central to the art ecology we are proposing, with learnings from the project to be shared through short films, event documentation and a toolkit on preserving the legacies of Black British Artists in museum and non-institutional contexts due for release in 2023.

Photo: Sarah Haylett © Donald Rodney Estate

Undoubtedly, as an artist, Donald Rodney would want his work to transcend his illness, but when I was working on the sickle-cell heritage project I spent time at Tate going through the sketchbooks and couldn’t help but think about the stories I’ve heard from sickle-cell patients. There was something - I couldn’t pinpoint why - but there was something, in going through his sketchbooks, that I felt resonated with the stories I’ve heard from patients, the stories I’ve heard from health professionals, the voluntary sector, the charity sector, highlighting the racial divide in Britain, and that’s what I found in the sketchbooks.  

His work didn’t necessarily talk about sickle-cell, but illness was used as a metaphor, and his experience of living with sickle-cell had an impact on his practice and outlook on life - his sense of mortality, his resilience, his sense of humour, his sense of injustice. As a black man going through the healthcare system, he understood prejudice, how the black body was perceived and how you are invisible and visible at the same time. Invisible, as sickle-cell is a disease that mainly affects people from African and Caribbean backgrounds in a Western world where you are ignored. Visible, because you are not seen as a patient but as a black person - addicted, angry, someone that can bear the pain.   

When Art360 invited me to participate in this project, I wanted people to understand what I felt when I went through the sketchbooks in the Tate Archive, and talk about sickle-cell from Donald Rodney’s perspective. 

Alinta Sara, ALitM Curator


Project Participants

The documentation above represents the following activities: a workshop at Tate Archive in November 2022, a film on the legacy of Donald Rodney produced by Alinta Sara and Ada Cotton and three Study Days held between March-April 2023:

  • Tosin Adeosun on the archive of Vanley Burke at Ikon Gallery, including a photographic portrait of Lauren Craig © Vanley Burke (third column, second image down - desktop view)

  • Lauren Craig on the archive of Maud Sulter at Touchstones Rochdale

  • Alinta Sara on the archive of Donald Rodney at New Art Gallery Wallsall

Please email contact@art360foundation.org.uk for permission to re-share images.

Thank you to all of the individuals that have been involved in this project:

Tosin Adeosun, Lauren Craig, Alinta Sara (ALitM Curators), Sepake Angiama, Tavian Hunter, Kaitlene Koranteng (Iniva), Renée Mussai and Erika Tan (mentors), Vanley Burke, Diane Symons (Donald Rodney Estate), Katy Barron, Deborah Cherry and Ama Sulter (Maud Sulter Estate), Jonathan Bartley, Ada Cotton (filmmakers), Sarah Haylett, Clare Hewitt and Carrie Skinner (archivists), Alastair Small, Ellie Porter and Mark Waugh (Art360 Foundation), Jessica Taylor and David A Bailey (project partners, International Curators Forum), Douglas Lonie, Claire Sivier, Fernanda Zotovici (Toolkit Consultants, There is An Alternative), Julie Brown, Zoe Lippett, Deborah Robinson, Stephen Snoddy (New Art Gallery Walsall), Aarifa Amatul-Hayye, Leonie O’Dwyer, Clare Marlow, Carol Thompson, Ruth Stanway, Bethany Williams, Andrew Yarnold (Wolverhampton Art Gallery), Bryan Beresford, Helen Beckett, Mark Doyle, Sarah Hodgkinson, David Gelsthorpe (Touchstones Rochdale), Adrian Glew and Jane Bramwell (Tate Archive), Keith Piper, Mike Phillips, Gary Stewart.