Joseph C. Miller Memorial Lecture by Alan Rice
How have African Atlantic artists transformed our understanding of slavery’s legacy?
Drawing on Rice’s three decades of experience as an academic and curator, including work with the Whitworth Art Gallery, Lancaster Maritime Museum, and the International Slavery Museum, this lecture explores how artists from the 1950s to the 2020s, such as Althea McNish, Lubaina Himid, Ellen Gallagher, Jade de Montserrat, and Lela Harris, have used their art to interrogate slavery’s history and its aftermath. Alan Rice will show how their radical interventions and acts of guerrilla memorialisation have reshaped museums, challenged dominant narratives, and redefined the field of the Black Atlantic.
Drawing on Rice’s three decades of experience as an academic and curator, including work with the Whitworth Art Gallery, Lancaster Maritime Museum, and the International Slavery Museum, this lecture explores how artists from the 1950s to the 2020s, such as Althea McNish, Lubaina Himid, Ellen Gallagher, Jade de Montserrat, and Lela Harris, have used their art to interrogate slavery’s history and its aftermath. Alan Rice will show how their radical interventions and acts of guerrilla memorialisation have reshaped museums, challenged dominant narratives, and redefined the field of the Black Atlantic.
Time
Monday, 01.12.25 - 04:15 PM
- 05:45 PM
Topic
“Imagining Inside the Invisible: Black Women Artists Visioning African Atlantic Worlds in the Wake of Traumatic Histories”
Speaker
Alan Rice
Target groups
Students
Researchers
All interested
Languages
English
Location
HYBRID event: On site in Niebuhrstr. 5 or via Zoom
Reservation
required
Additional Information
Organizer
BCDSS
Contact