Lubaina Himid (b. 1954, Zanzibar, lives and works in Preston) works in painting, drawing, installation and printmaking. A member of the Black Arts Movement of the 1980s, her work is politically critical, tackling questions of race, gender and class. This exhibition draws together paintings and installations from the late 1990s to the present day to consider issues of labour, migration and creativity. It takes place alongside two other major UK presentations of Himid’s work: Invisible Strategies, a simultaneous solo exhibition at Modern Art Oxford and The Place is Here, a group show at Nottingham Contemporary which traces conversations between black artists, writers and thinkers in 1980s Britain. Himid is primarily known as a painter. Nam...
Thin Black Line(s) focuses on the contribution of Black and Asian women artists to British art in th...
'Gifts to Kings', gathered together a range of installations which sought to highlight the hidden co...
A group exhibition at the Michaelis Galleries, University of Cape Town, 2 July to 18 August 2017, co...
This exhibition engages with the story of the forced journey and draws on the history of the enslave...
Modern Art Oxford presents the first major survey exhibition by British artist Lubaina Himid. One of...
Himid makes paintings, prints, drawings and installations which celebrate Black creativity and the p...
Inside the Invisible provides the first examination of the work of Turner Prize-winning Black Britis...
Having transformed the main hall of Kelvingrove Art Gallery with her commission for GI 2018 - Breaki...
The Truth is Never Watertight brings together a wide range of paintings from the 1980s to the presen...
Thin Black Line(s) was an exhibition curated by Paul Goodwin and Lubaina Himid at Tate Britain, Janu...
This thesis explores the issues, themes, and debates concerning contemporary artists of African. Afr...
Tate Britain’s major conference, held in collaboration with Birkbeck, University of London and cultu...
Building on the challenges set out at the Shades of Black conference in 2001, this thesis contribute...
Griselda Pollock traces Lubaina Himid’s creative trajectory as she articulates her presence and sing...
Guests from all walks of life discuss their musical loves and hates, and talk about the influence mu...
Thin Black Line(s) focuses on the contribution of Black and Asian women artists to British art in th...
'Gifts to Kings', gathered together a range of installations which sought to highlight the hidden co...
A group exhibition at the Michaelis Galleries, University of Cape Town, 2 July to 18 August 2017, co...
This exhibition engages with the story of the forced journey and draws on the history of the enslave...
Modern Art Oxford presents the first major survey exhibition by British artist Lubaina Himid. One of...
Himid makes paintings, prints, drawings and installations which celebrate Black creativity and the p...
Inside the Invisible provides the first examination of the work of Turner Prize-winning Black Britis...
Having transformed the main hall of Kelvingrove Art Gallery with her commission for GI 2018 - Breaki...
The Truth is Never Watertight brings together a wide range of paintings from the 1980s to the presen...
Thin Black Line(s) was an exhibition curated by Paul Goodwin and Lubaina Himid at Tate Britain, Janu...
This thesis explores the issues, themes, and debates concerning contemporary artists of African. Afr...
Tate Britain’s major conference, held in collaboration with Birkbeck, University of London and cultu...
Building on the challenges set out at the Shades of Black conference in 2001, this thesis contribute...
Griselda Pollock traces Lubaina Himid’s creative trajectory as she articulates her presence and sing...
Guests from all walks of life discuss their musical loves and hates, and talk about the influence mu...
Thin Black Line(s) focuses on the contribution of Black and Asian women artists to British art in th...
'Gifts to Kings', gathered together a range of installations which sought to highlight the hidden co...
A group exhibition at the Michaelis Galleries, University of Cape Town, 2 July to 18 August 2017, co...