Sonia Boyce

Sonia Dawn Boyce, MBE RA (born 1962), is a British Afro-Caribbean artist, living and working in London. She is Professor at Middlesex University[1] and Professor of Black Art and Design at University of the Arts London.[2] Boyce's research interests explore art as a social practice and the critical and contextual debates that arise from this area of study. With an emphasis on collaborative work, Boyce has been working closely with other artists since 1990, often involving improvisation and spontaneous performative actions on the part of her collaborators. Boyce's work involves a variety of media, such as drawing, print, photography, video and sound, and her art explores the interstices between sound and memory, the dynamics of space, and incorporating the spectator. To date, Boyce has taught Fine Art studio practice for over thirty years in several art colleges across the UK.[3]

Background

Born in London, Sonia Boyce studied at Stourbridge College in the West Midlands. She works across a range of media including photography, installation and text.[4] She came to prominence as part of the Black British cultural renaissance of the 1980s.[5] Her work also references feminism.[6] Ron Exley (2001) has written: "The effect of her work has been to re-orientate and re-negotiate the position of Black or Afro-Caribbean art within the cultural mainstream."[7]

An early exhibition was in 1983 at the Africa Centre, London, entitled Five Black Women. Boyce's early works were large chalk-and-pastel drawings depicting friends, family and childhood experiences. In them she often included depictions of wallpaper patterns and bright colours associated with the Caribbean and experienced through her own particular background. It has been suggested that through this work the artist examined her position as a black woman in Britain and the historical events in which that experience was rooted.[8]

In her later works Boyce used diverse media including digital photography to produce composite images depicting contemporary black life. Although her focus is seen to have shifted away from specific ethnic experiences, her themes continue to be the experiences of a black woman living in a white society, and how religion, politics and sexual politics made up that experience.[8]

She has taught widely and uses workshops as part of her creative process, and her works can be seen in many national collections.[9] Boyce's works are held in the collection of Tate Modern,[10] Government Art Collection[11] and The British Council.

Sonia Boyce was awarded an MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours List 2007, for services to art.[12] In 2016, Sonia Boyce was elected as a member of the Royal Academy.[13]

Medium

In her early artistic years Boyce used chalk and pastel to make drawings of her friends, family and herself. She graduated later to incorporate photography, graphic design, film and caricature to convey very political messages within her work. The incorporation of collage in her work allowed her to create complicated and interesting pieces. It is important to note Boyce's utilization of caricature within her work. The caricature is historically meant to showcase exaggerated features of individuals. By using caricatures, which are often grotesque and incite negative perceptions of their subjects, she allows herself to reclaim them in her own image.[14]

Message

Boyce's work is vastly politically affiliated. She utilizes a variety of mediums within the same work to convey messages revolving around black representation, perceptions of the black body and pervasive notions that arose from colonial pseudoscience. Within her bodies of work Boyce wishes to convey the personal isolation that results from being black in a white supremacist society. In her work she explores notions of the Black Body as the "other". Commonly, she uses collage to convey a body of art that incites a complicated history, one that is untold and important. Boyce rose as a prominent artist in the 1980s when the Black Cultural Renaissance took place in the United Kingdom. The movement arose out of Margaret Thatcher's conservatism and also Enoch Powell's racism. Using this societal backdrop, Boyce takes conventional English narrative surrounding the black body and turns it upside down. Through her art she conveys a hope to overturn ethnographic notions of race that pervaded throughout slavery and after the slaves had been emancipated.[14]

Exhibitions

Publications

Research positions

Further reading

References

  1. "Prof Sonia Boyce - Professor in Fine Arts - ADRI". contentcurator.net.
  2. Tom Banks (3 January 2014). "UAL appoints nine new cross-university heads". Design Week.
  3. Boyce, Sonia. "Professor Sonia Boyce: TrAIN Member". www.transnational.org.uk. University of the Arts London. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  4. Rebecca Fortnum, Contemporary British Women Artists: In Their Own Words, I.B.Tauris, 2007, p. 113. ISBN 1-84511-224-5
  5. Kwesi Owusu, Black British Culture and Society: A Text-Reader, Routledge, 1999, p. 4. ISBN 0-415-17846-0
  6. Peggy Phelan and Helena Reckitt, Art and Feminism. London: Phaidon, 2001.
  7. Exley, Ron. "Sonia Boyce Artists Talking". a-n The Artists Information Company. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  8. 1 2 Oxford Art Online, www.oxfordartonline.com.
  9. 1 2 Crinson, Mark (1998). Sonia Boyce: Performance. London: Institute of International Visual Arts (INIVA). ISBN 1 899846 15 8.
  10. Sonia Boyce "Artist biography", Tate online.
  11. Government Art Collection. Sonia Boyce
  12. "Birthday honours: London list", BBC News, 16 June 2007; accessed 6 September 2007.
  13. "Sonia Boyce RA", Royal Academy, 9 March 2016; accessed 24 April 2016.
  14. 1 2 Noel, Samantha (March 28, 2014). "Putting on a Bold-Face". Third Text. 28 (2): 163–176. doi:10.1080/09528822.2014.890789.
  15. "For you, only you – Ruskin School of Art (exhibition page)". Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  16. "Sonia Boyce: Like Love – Part One". Spike Island. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  17. "Female Art in Action", The Radical Lives of Eric & Jessica Huntley website.
  18. Boyce, Sonia. "Professor Sonia Boyce". www.transnational.org.uk. University of the Arts London. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  19. Boyce, Sonia. "Professor Sonia Boyce: TrAIN Member". www.transnational.org.uk. University of Arts London. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  20. Boyce, Sonia (2010). Like Love. The Green Box. ISBN 9783941644168.
  21. Boyce, Sonia. "Art and Design Research Institute". Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  22. "TransNational Member Page". Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  23. "BAM - Black Artists and Modernism". www.rcuk.ac.uk. Research Councils UK. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  24. "Black Artists and Modernism (BAM)". www.transnational.org.uk. University of the Arts London. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  25. Various (1995). Mirage: Enigmas of Race, Difference & Desire. London: ICA. ISBN 0 905263 84 7.

External links

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