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Tate St Ives Talk

A Closer Look: Through Our Eyes

This event has sold out. If you would like to attend, please email visiting.stives@tate.org.uk to add your name to the waiting list

20 February 2025 at 18.30–20.30
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Denzil Forrester Cottage Lover 1997

Denzil Forrester Cottage Lover 1997, Oil paint on canvas, 183×122 cm

The first in a new series of programmes in partnership with Black Voices Cornwall

This is the first event from a new programming partnership between Tate St Ives and anti-racism charity Black Voices Cornwall. They will be joined on the evening by artists Maria Christoforidou, Libita Sibungu and Denzil Forrester.

Denzil Forrester’s work is represented in many collections nationally and internationally. His work Cottage Lover (1997) is currently on display at Tate St Ives, on loan from Arts Council Collection. Libita Sibungu lives and works in Cornwall and is the recipient of the Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award (2022). Maria Christoforidou is an artist and teacher whose work explores issues including natural and cultural extraction.

The evening will focus on an experience of Black rurality and creativity. Sharing and thinking around how intersectional identities relate to how art is created, and how Blackness and rurality can be positively manifested.

This is an opportunity to hear from these influential artists living and working in Cornwall on the impact of place and Black experience on their careers and practice and to consider how to support the next generation of artists of colour in Cornwall.

Supported by the John S Cohen Foundation

Maria Christoforidou

Maria Christoforidou is an Afro-Greek artist, writer and researcher. Her practice explores the political, physical and performative operations of words and images. She is motivated by a hope to create pauses that allow minor stories of sameness, voices, bodies and plant comrades to evade classification, come to rest, undoing unspeakable knots of otherness. She is an art history lecturer at Falmouth University and lives in Cornwall.

Black Voices Cornwall (BVC)

Black Voices Cornwall (BVC) is an Anti-Racism Charity striving for racial justice and committed to enabling Cornwall to become an actively anti-racist region. BVC is a multi-faceted Charity which provides many services. They are passionate about empowering the global majority communities to succeed and thrive, alongside encouraging and educating more allies to tackle racism.

Denzil Forrester

Denzil Forrester b. Grenada, 1956. Lives and works in Cornwall, UK. Denzil Forrester's vibrant paintings immortalise the energy of London’s reggae and dub nightclub scene during the 1980s, a subject that has endured throughout four decades of his practice. Forrester’s recent works juxtapose urban dancehalls with themes of social injustice and recollections from his childhood in Grenada.

Libita Sibungu

Libita Sibungu (b.1987) lives and works in Cornwall. She is a multidisciplinary artist drawing on her British-Cornish-Namibian heritage, to make discursive works that explore — the entangled personal histories, and colonial legacies inscribed in the body and land. Sibungu is the recipient of the Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award (2022).

This event will be BSL interpreted.

Tate St Ives is located on Porthmeor Beach. There is a ramp up to the gallery entrance alongside stairs with a handrail.

There are lifts to all Levels of the gallery, or alternatively you can take the stairs.

  • Accessible and standard toilets are on Level 3, next to Gallery 6.
  • A Changing Places toilet is on Level 3, next to Gallery 1.
  • Ear defenders can be borrowed from the information desk.

To help plan your visit to Tate St Ives, have a look at our visual story. It includes photographs and information of what you can expect from a visit to the gallery.

For more information before your visit:

  • Email visiting.stives@tate.org.uk
  • Call +44 (0)173 679 6226

Check all Tate St Ives accessibility information

Tate St Ives

Foyle Studio

Porthmeor Beach
St Ives
Cornwall TR26 1TG
Plan your visit

Date & Time

20 February 2025 at 18.30–20.30

Pricing

£0 / £0 for Members

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