Midlands Art Papers 4

  • A portrait and a landscape

    Editorial: On Belonging

    Midlands Art Papers Editor Sophie Hatchwell introduces this fourth issue of MAP and discusses one of common themes that run throughout the following articles: the ways in which art objects can help us understand what it's like to belong or not belong in different places and at different time.

    Editorial

  • The front of the purse

    Object in focus: Mrs Hawker's Purse

    Curator Rebecca Unsworth explores what the contents of a late nineteenth-century purse can tell us about the woman who owned it, and about the classification of collections at Birmingham Museums Trust.

    Rebecca Unsworth article

  • Paintings on a gallery wall

    In depth: Absence in post-war British paintings

    South Asian Modernists in regional collections

    Art Historian Alice Correia explores how the representation of South Asian artists in regional collections can help us rethink the hitherto exclusionary narratives of twentieth-century British art.

    Alice Correia article

  • Detail from the Murillo painting

    In depth: A Boy in Seville

    The representation of black identities in a 17th century Spanish painting

    Helen Cobby and Rebecca Randle share their research on Bartolomé Esteban Murillo's painting The Marriage at Cana from the collection at the Barber Institute of Fine Arts, and discuss what this work can tell us about the visibility of Black history in art museums.

    H Cobby and R Randle article

  • Detail from drawing

    In conversation: Race, Empire and the Pre-Raphaelites

    Curator Victoria Osborne and Art Historians Sabrina Rahman and Kate Nichols discuss their British Art Network Research Group ‘Race, Empire and the Pre-Raphaelites’, and how they are exploring the potential for rethinking Pre-Raphaelite and Arts and Crafts objects through the lenses of anti-racism and decoloniality.

    Conversation

  • Tiles in the exhibition

    On exhibit: Modern Mercia: A lockdown exhibition

    Curators Jane Simpkiss and Louise Campbell introduce their exhibition ‘Modern Mercia’, held at Leamington Art Gallery and Museum.

    Jane Simpkiss and Louise Campbell