|
PAST EXHIBTIONS ARCHIVE
Different Worlds: Contemporary
Responses to Migration
5 March - 17 June 2007
Bookshop Gallery
Free admission

Stefan Velev (from Bulgaria)
and Juraj Tuska (from Slovakia)
by Gayle Chong Kwan
© Gayle Chong Kwan
|
Examining the contemporary experience
of young people's migration to Britain, Different Worlds
is a companion exhibition to Between Worlds: Voyagers to Britain
1700-1850, opening at the National Portrait Gallery, London
on Thursday 8 March.
Responding to the narratives
explored in Between Worlds - the diverse experiences of
18th and 19th century voyagers to Britain such as the 'Four Indian
Kings' of North America and Sake Dean Mahomed of India - students
from two London schools, aged between 12 and 16 from Forest Hill
Boys School, Lewisham and Quintin Kynaston School, Westminster,
have worked with the artist Gayle Chong Kwan to interpret their
personal experiences of migration to Britain. The exhibition
comprises individual and group photographic portraits and written
responses from the students.
Each of the 17 students that
have taken part in the project shares the experience of living
between at least two cultures. The majority of boys from Forest
Hill Boys School have settled in Britain during the last three
years. The young people from Quintin Kynaston School have arrived
more recently, in the past year. They have started school in
the last few months and are all learning English as an additional
language.
The young people or their families
were born in various parts of Europe, Africa, the Middle East
and Asia. They are similar to earlier travellers to Britain in
that their reasons for coming are diverse: family ties, economic
prospects, political asylum and new opportunities. Some have
travelled here directly while others have had circuitous, and
in certain cases, traumatic journeys.
The students began by exploring
the lives and images of sitters included in Between Worlds,
and also by visiting the National Portrait Gallery to investigate
portraits from sixteenth to nineteenth centuries. Some were influenced
by the Tudor portraits that use pose to denote power and ambition,
others were inspired by historic and contemporary portrait sitters
who had chosen to be depicted with significant personal objects
or in landscapes that recalled their homeland.
Different Worlds: Contemporary
Responses to Migration
has been curated by Matilda Pye.
On the experience of the students
who have created the exhibition and the project as whole, Matilda
says: 'Each of the participants looks with pride from the present
to the future of their adult lives. Some of the participants
are full of ambition for the roles they intend to play in shaping
their personal future and in individual cases, the future of
others. Certain portraits are less certain of what is to come
or where exactly they intend to make their lives. This is in
part a response to conflict in their home countries.'
|