|
Order
this publication online
Between Worlds: Voyagers to
Britain 1700-1850
Foreword by Ekow Eshun
Professor Jos Hackforth-Jones, Professor David Bindman,
Dr Stephanie Pratt and Dr Romita Ray
'A chronicle of mutual discoveries
in which individuals and culturesare changed by the repercussions
of connection.' Ekow Eshun
From the seventeenth century,
largely as a result of British colonial expansion, non-European
visitors to England caused widespread frissons of excitement,
interest and curiosity in social circles across the capital.
This book examines the complexities and ambiguities of encounters
between these visitors and their British contemporaries over
150 years.
These visitors from former British
colonies, including North America, the South Pacific, India and
Africa; their reasons for coming and their reception in Britain
were as diverse as their backgrounds. Their stories, their impressions
and the impact they had on British society are examined here
for the first time.
The book brings to life the fascinating
accounts of a small but diverse group of fourteen individuals,
including the 'Four Indian Kings' from Canada and Mai from the
South Pacific, Raja Rammonhun Roy from India and Sara Baartman
'The Hottentot Venus' from Africa. In addition to its art-historical
import, this timely account is of real contemporary cultural
resonance.
Published to accompany an
exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, London from 8 March
to 15 June 2007.
Ekow Eshun is Artistic Director of the Institute
of Contemporary Arts in London.
Professor Jos Hackforth-Jones is Provost and Professor
of Art History at Richmond The American International University
in London.
Professor David Bindman was formerly Durning Lawrence
Professor of Art at University College, London.
Dr Stephanie Pratt is Principal Lecturer in Art History
at University of Plymouth, UK.
Dr Romita Ray is Assistant Professor of Art History at
Syracuse University, USA.
Specification
230 x 180mm, 120 pages
75 illustrations
ISBN 10 -1 85514 379 8
ISBN 13 - 978 1 85514 379 1
£15 (rrp - paperback)
Published March 2007
|