'1807: Blake, Slavery and the Radical Mind' at Tate Britain |
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| Saturday, 07 April 2007 18:38 |
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LONDON - A special exhibition entitled 1807: Blake, Slavery and the Radical Mind will open on 30 April to mark the bicentenary of the passing of the 1807 Parliamentary Act which abolished the British Slave Trade. Incorporating historical documents and works of art, and innovative interpretation and commentary, the exhibition will focus on William Blake (1757-1827) and the circle of liberal writers and artists associated with the radical London publisher Joseph Johnson (1738-1809), many of whose publications supported the emergence of socially and politically progressive ideas and causes. In Blake’s prints and poetry, which have inspired generations of artists, writers and religious and political dissenters, we can find some powerful anti-slavery sentiments. This display will evoke the atmosphere of debate to which Blake and many others contributed and which helped shape the ideas that underpinned the introduction of the Act. On Exhibition 30 April until 28 October, 2007.
Visitors will be invited to explore the historical and intellectual context for the abolition movement and to consider issues of race, identity and freedom of speech. The books, illustrations, prints and paintings from the period will establish the wider philosophical and political setting for abolition. The exhibition has been curated by writer and broadcaster, Mike Phillips and Tate Curators, Robin Hamlyn and Martin Myrone.
Tate Britain At Tate Britain there will be workshops and talks throughout the year and a Late at Tate evening which will focus on issues around 1807. Visit Tate Britain at : www.tate.org.uk Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |



The display will include Blake’s The Little Black Boy from the Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1794) and two important engravings by Blake which illustrate army officer John Gabriel Stedman’s first hand account of life on the slave plantations, his Narrative of a Five Years’ Expedition, against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam (1796). Blake's illustrations to this book, including The Execution of Breaking on the Rack, are among the most powerful and shocking anti-slavery images. The exhibition will also feature other pieces by Blake such as the tempera, The Spiritual Form of Nelson Guiding Leviathan of about 1805-9, and works by Blake’s contemporaries, such as caricatures by James Gillray and two little-known anti-slavery prints after paintings by George Morland. This exhibition will include important historical publications loaned by the British Library and the British Museum and other collections. There will be books by contemporary radical thinkers of the day such as John Howard the prison reformer, the poet William Cowper and feminist author Mary Wollstonecraft. The well-known portrait of Wollstonecraft by John Opie of 1790-1 will be on display.
There will be a series of related events, workshops and displays across Tate over this year. 
