‘Another layer of pigment needed adding to the canvas’: artist John Akomfrah on changing the narrative, from Windrush to colonialism – The Guardian
12 April 2024
If I’d met him 50-odd years ago, John Akomfrah says, with the infectious giggle that punctuates his conversation, two words would have sprung immediately to my mind: “Black nerd.” He was the kid at school who soaked up every bit of cultural learning going, who always had his head in a book on the bus. There was, of course, he says, “some connection between the hostility of the outside world in the 1960s and 1970s and the refuge kids like me found in books. I was always looking for things that allowed you to imagine this place otherwise. That’s why I loved going to the Tate Gallery as a child; that’s why I loved going to the cinema,” he smiles again. “And don’t forget, television wasn’t exactly a refuge for a Black kid in the 1970s…”
If Akomfrah, now a youthful 66, sponged up that culture in his formative years, the past four decades have seen him reinventing it, in artistic film-making that is constantly curious to re-evaluate imagined pasts. In this way, Sir John – he was knighted in last year’s New Year’s honours – never stops making sense of the political present. With the news agenda full of postcolonial insanity – a Tory government pinning its desperate election hopes on deporting 300 refugees to Rwanda – he feels like the wisest of choices to represent the nation at this month’s Venice Biennale.
When I meet him at his studio – two warehouse-sized floors in Wood Green, north London – he is being trailed by a film crew from the British Council, the body that selected him to create this year’s British pavilion. Akomfrah has always led collaborative teams: in his 20s he was the leading light of a group called the Black Audio Film Collective with fellow travellers from Portsmouth Poly; since 1998, his art has been produced through Smoking Dog Films, with two survivors of that group, his friend David Lawson and his partner Lina Gopaul.
Continue reading via The Guardian.
The British Council commission Listening All Night to the Rain is at the at La Biennale di Venezia from 20 April – 24 November.
Image: John Akomfrah, Arcadia, 2023, Five channel HD Video, colour, black and white, 15.1 surround sound, 58 minutes 38 seconds © Smoking Dogs Films, courtesy of Lisson Gallery