Understanding Displacement Aesthetics and Making Change in the Art Gallery with Refugees, Migrants and Host Communities

This three-year AHRC project investigates the humanitarian aspirations of art and craft, and analyses the impact of artistic responses to displacement and refugeedom.

Call for Papers

University of Manchester Conference

Understanding Displacement in Visual Art and Cultural History: 1945 to Now.

Tuesday 24 and Wednesday 25, October 2023

Deadline for submissions: Friday 7, July 2023

Tristram Paul Hillier (1905-1983), Le Havre de Grace (‘The Safe Haven’, 1939).
Tristram Paul Hillier (1905-1983), Le Havre de Grace (‘The Safe Haven’, 1939). Courtesy of Manchester Art Gallery.

The project aims to understand how and in what forms 'displacement aesthetics’ emerged in response to the Second World War and its aftermath, especially in art and craft practices and in exhibitions in international museums, UN sponsored welfare programmes and UNESCO’s cultural work.

Challenging the patterns and practices of ‘displacement aesthetics’, the project seeks to amplify the voices of refugee and migrant artists and curators. It will examine how they have sought to overturn displacement aesthetics and critique its discourses, and can offer new ways of seeing not necessarily defined by or confined to the performance of refugeedom or the experience of displacement. In doing so, this collaborative project seeks to bring communities together to create resilience through the shared enterprise of making significant institutional changes in two major art spaces in Manchester.

Challenging the patterns and practices of ‘displacement aesthetics’, the project seeks to amplify the voices of refugee and migrant artists and curators.

Ana Maria Pacheco (b. 1943),The Longest Journey I (1987).
Ana Maria Pacheco (b. 1943),The Longest Journey I (1987). Courtesy of the Whitworth Art Gallery

The project has three research strands:

Historical and Contemporary Forms of ‘Displacement Aesthetics’ - in two key periods of displacement and forced migration in the wake of the Second World War AND from 2002 to the present-day.

Art-Making and Art Galleries - examining local and international art collections and artistic practices, and their interventions into ‘displacement aesthetics’. Through our partnership with Manchester Art Gallery and the Whitworth Art Gallery, the project aims to make significance curatorial and infrastructural changes in the art institution.

Art as Cultural Resilience - studying the impact of these changes arising from a creative entrepreneur programme for artists and curators (delivered by the internationally renowned arts NGO In Place of War (IPOW); gallery collections research programme with communities; a participatory arts exhibition with the Whitworth Art Gallery; commissioning of new works; and the permanent redesign of a key ‘welcome space’ in Manchester Art Gallery.

The project will also connect with galleries, curators and artists around the world, especially in Greece, Australia and the Middle East. Alongside conferences and workshops, it will also produce a book that takes account of best practices in the international arts community and assesses the art and curating projects in Manchester.

People

Khaled Hourani, The Blue Figure (2017). c. The Artist
Khaled Hourani, The Blue Figure (2017). c. The Artist

Principal Investigator

Professor Ana Carden-Coyne

Co-Investigator

Professor Charles Green, Professor of Contemporary Art, University of Melbourne

Research Fellow

Dr Chrisoula Lionis

Research Associate

Dr Angeliki Roussou

Advisory Board

Professor Anthony Downey - Professor of Visual Culture in the Middle East and North Africa
Birmingham School of Art / Birmingham Institute of Creative Arts (BICA)

Dr Suzannah Biernoff - Reader in Visual Culture, Department of History of Art
Birkbeck, University of London

Ambrose Musiyiwa - NWCDTP Collaborative Doctoral Award PhD Researcher | Department of Drama and Film in collaboration with Community Arts North West (CAN) | School of Arts, Languages and Cultures | University of Manchester

 

Job Opportunity: Cultural Producer for 'Rethinking the Grand Tour'

Cultural Producer Brief

Gallery

Logos of the Centre for the Cultural History of War, Manchester Art Gallery, Whitworth Art Gallery and the University of Melbourne