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The Migration Museum is a museum in London, England, devoted to the movement of people to and from the United Kingdom. The Migration Museum Project was founded in 2011 by Barbara Roche, a former Minister of State for Immigration. [1] From 2013 it held a series of popup exhibitions and other activities. [2]
The museum’s inaugural exhibitions are ‘All Directions: Art That Moves You’, which will feature works by Francis Alÿs, Cornelia Parker and Do Ho Suh, and ‘The Family of Migrants’, an exhibition inspired by Edward Steichen’s Family of Man at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, which will present 194 photographs on the subject ...
The Mississippi Museum of Art (MMA) in Jackson, and the Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) jointly commissioned the art for the exhibition in 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic. [2] [1] Artists in the exhibition were asked "to research and reflect on their personal histories and migration narratives through the lens of their contemporary practices."
The Academy hosts the Summer Exhibition an annual open art exhibition, which means anyone can enter their work to be considered for exhibition. Established in 1769, it is the oldest and largest open submission exhibition in the world and is included in London's Social Season. The members of The Academy, also known as Royal Academicians select ...
An exhibition of media and interactive art inspired by the William Smith map at the Yorkshire Museum. "The BFG in Pictures" (12 October 2018 – 24 February 2019). An exhibition of works by Quentin Blake to illustrate The BFG. "When All is Quiet: Kaiser Chiefs in Conversation with York Art Gallery" (14 December 2018 – 10 March 2019).
Yousefzada's first solo exhibition, "Being Somewhere Else", was at the critically acclaimed contemporary art space Ikon Gallery in 2018. The exhibition was made to demonstrate the inequalities in the factory systems of mass production, as well as exploring marginalised voices and experiences within migration. [17]
Migration Period art denotes the artwork of the Germanic peoples during the Migration period (c. 300 – 900). It includes the Migration art of the Germanic tribes on the continent, as well the start of the Insular art or Hiberno-Saxon art of the Anglo-Saxon and Celtic fusion in Britain and Ireland .
To expect the progressive, internationalist art world to participate in a celebration of Brexit is to fire a volley into the culture war". [45] The art group Migrants In Culture wrote an open letter to the festival calling it a "nationalistic branding exercise". The letter has been signed by over 750 UK artists to date. [46]