artist / participant

press release

Tate has acquired three major pieces of work by Black Audio Film Collective: the seminal film Handsworth Songs 1986, and the two tape slide installations Expeditions One: Signs of Empire 1984 and Expeditions Two: Images of Nationality 1984. All three works were presented by Tate Members.They will be on display at Tate Britain from January to May 2009 as part of the BP British Art Displays 2009. This will be the first time in over twenty years that the haunting works Expeditions One: Signs of Empire and Expeditions Two: Images of Nationality will have been screened together.

Black Audio Film Collective was a cine-cultural film group formed in 1982 by seven former college friends in London. The group wrote theoretical papers, ran screenings of experimental and third world cinema, held filmmaking workshops and produced films that explored identity politics, representation and filmmaking aesthetics. The Collective became renowned for its pioneering multidisciplinary work and its creation of space for Black British cinema to develop and flourish. The three works now in Tate Collection were self-financed and distributed by the Collective, and are recognised as a cornerstone of the independent film movement of the 1980s.

The Collective’s members included John Akomfrah, Reece Auguiste, Lina Gopaul, Eddie George, Avril Johnson, David Lawson and Trevor Mathison, and together they made fourteen films and two tape slide installations. The group’s ground-breaking films, alongside its other work, resulted in a number of awards at major international film festivals through the 1980s and 90s, including the prestigious John Grierson Award for Handsworth Songs. The Collective has also participated in the Official Selections of key international film festivals, including Cannes, Berlin, Melbourne, Venice and Bombay (Mumbai). Black Audio Film Collective was wound up in 1998.

Tate Britain displays three newly acquired works by Black Audio Film Collective