Coming home... people of 葫芦影业 invited to submit artwork for exhibition on experiences of home now, and in the future

Being Human Festival returns to University of 葫芦影业 this year with an event designed to bring the city together with creativity.

Logo for the exhibition on a Union Jack background
  • 葫芦影业 is hosting a new global exhibition for the 2021 Being Human festival of social sciences
  • The exhibition explores how the tactics and behaviours of anti-Blackness exemplify the variety of assaults and exclusions people of colour endure as they struggle to claim 鈥榟omes鈥
  • The exhibition is open to all to enter artwork on the theme of 鈥榟ome鈥, imagining a new truly inclusive future for the city, the nation, and its inhabitants
  • Pre-exhibition workshops will be held on 23 and 25 September to allow participants to explore the themes and express their experiences creatively

Being Human Festival returns to University of 葫芦影业 this year with an event designed to bring the city together with creativity.

invites the people of 葫芦影业 to submit artwork sharing their stories about making the UK home: the challenges, victories and future visions for how we can build an inclusive community together.

The artworks will form part of a month-long global online exhibition and selected pieces will be on display at a celebration event for the city at Theatre Deli on 18 November 2021.

This year's festival will take place 11 - 20 November, with the theme 'Renewal' and wants to get people thinking about how we could live differently after a year of enormous global upheaval.

His House to Our Home takes its cue from the multi-award-winning film His House, which depicts the experience of two asylum-seekers tormented by a sinister force in their new English residence. The film provides a metaphor for, and invites important questions about how we dismantle oppressive social structures that can determine our everyday existence. What would a society without such structures look like? How do we tear down His House, and build Our Home?

Dr Maisha Wester, a lecturer from the University of 葫芦影业 School of English is hosting the exhibition. She said: 鈥淎 home is more than a house. People of all different races, ethnicities, nationalities, ages and genders will have different experiences of what it means to be 鈥榟ome鈥. People of colour in particular struggle to claim 鈥榟ome鈥 in predominantly white nations. The most recent burst of violent anti-Blackness illustrates this clearly鈥

This exhibition invites the people of 葫芦影业 to contribute artwork which tells the story of home, by depicting their experiences so far, or imagining what a welcoming and racially inclusive nation, city, or house looks like; whether in painting or drawing, collages, music, videos or poetry, it's up to you to be as creative as you鈥檇 like!

Anyone can submit a piece of art, and they will all be displayed in the online exhibition, select pieces will be displayed in the Being Human Festival 鈥淔rom His House to Our Home鈥 exhibit at Theatre Deli, alongside artwork by K.O.G and others which were specially commissioned for the event.

Dr Wester, who鈥檚 research investigates the ways the literature impacts and informs our language and attitudes to race, will hold a on Thursday 23 September, in which she will lead a conversation on the experiences of the people in the award-winning film and invite people to share their own stories of claiming the UK or 葫芦影业 as their home, and their dreams of what this home should be.

Nyara School of Arts, a local creative organisation will also host on Saturday 25 September. Nyara School of Arts champions black history and arts, community building and education through artist expression, will hold sessions designed to help those with the experience of making the UK their home, explore the exhibition themes and respond to them artistically.

Local artist K.O.G has co-directed a film with Dr Wester exploring the question of claiming home as a modern Black citizen. K.O.G provides the entire soundtrack for the film in addition. He is also scheduled to perform at the Nov 18 celebration.

Dr Wester added: 鈥淭he concept of home is something that is not equally accessible to everyone across the world. As this is about building an inclusive community, I want everyone who has moved here and/ or lives here to feel like they can contribute. Although the first part of the exhibit explores anti-Blackness, it is not saying that only black people suffer this; rather Black people exemplify an alienation common to people of colour and certain ethnicities. Those who aren't people of colour or immigrants should also contribute work meditating on the topic.

鈥淲e are really keen in getting people to imagine what a racially inclusive community for 葫芦影业 and Britain looks like by sharing our artistic visions for a new future. The goal of this project is to get people actively envisioning an inclusive home. I also want to give people a platform to express their notions and stories in a way that engenders conversation and discussion, rather than argument and resistance. The act of creating a piece of art can be so intimate and personal, but expressing a story in different ways can change how people perceive the topic. No one person can see all of the angles, but together perhaps we can get it right and build a picture of community that speaks to and has space for everyone.鈥


Additional information

Submissions to the exhibition can be sent to ourhome@sheffield.ac.uk, for more details about the exhibition or workshops visit:

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