IT was meant to be sugar cane. When Tate came calling to invite the eminent Ghanaian artist El Anatsui to create a new installation for the Turbine Hall Hyundai Commission, his first idea was to plant a field of the plant. But annoyingly, they told him the Mexican artist Abraham Cruzvillegas had done something not dissimilar in the space in 2015.
Anatsui, now 81, knew that those white gold grains were the key, however. “I was born in the colonial Gold Coast [now independent Ghana] and I grew up knowing that Tate & Lyle benefited from the transatlantic trade. So I had to do something to do with that period, when the continents were linked, whether for good or bad,” he gives a slightly dark chuckle. “You can’t just avoid the transatlantic project.”
His second idea was to recreate the chapel of a slave castle — commercial forts that dot Ghana’s short coast, used to hold the human cargo before they were packed in their terrified hundreds into the stinking holds of ships to take them on to the Americas and the Caribbean. Anatsui visited the largest, Cape Coast Castle, and found that above the dank dungeons where the slaves were kept, stood a chapel.
“So the idea came to me to explore the interplay between the church and slavery,” he explains. In the end though, the frustrating dimensions of the Turbine Hall thwarted that idea too.
Bu hikaye Evening Standard dergisinin October 10, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Evening Standard dergisinin October 10, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Why are England wasting time waiting for Tuchel?
Winning the World Cup is the aim, so the new boss should start now
He's been shot, and punched by Mike Tyson, but British boxing's great survivor is back on top and aiming to rule the world
This is where the magic happens,\" reads a big neon sign scrawled across the entrance to the offices of arguably the most powerful man in British boxing today.
How Sketch went from 'obscene' to era-defining
After arocky start, the glamorous and infamous restaurant is now an institution
Money is worth less than time'
He's quit Fendi, but what will Kim Jones do next?
London's Roman Amphitheatre
Guildhall Yard, EC2V
Liberals didn't notice they'd lost relevance in the all-consuming digital sphere
There are many reasons why Donald Trump might have won the election last week.
Do we have to die?
One neuroscientist thinks the answer is no
How to have a magical Christmas in Edinburgh
From cosy cobblestone streets to abundant Yuletide goings-on, few cities rival the Scottish capital in creating Christmas whimsy.
London's best festive restaurants
The social season is upon us once more. These are the city’s most coveted Christmas venues, which need to be booked soon so as to not miss out on the tinsel and tipples.
Rag'n'Bone Man
I struggle with being recognised... I'll never really feel comfortable with it'