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This is a past display. Go to current displays

Liz Johnson Artur, Time Don’t Run Here 2020. Tate. © reserved.

Liz Johnson Artur

‘I use time but in a different way, I create my own way to deal with time.’ A display of photographs by Liz Johnson Artur

After joining the Black Lives Matter protests in London in Spring 2020, photographer Liz Johnson Artur was motivated to show solidarity with and photograph protestors in Vauxhall, Westminster and Trafalgar Square. Artur decided to print the work on pages from braille editions of two novels she collected: Iris Murdoch’s The Red and The Green (1965) and John Harris’s Ride out the Storm: A Novel of Dunkirk (1975), both of which contain references to difference, conflict and resistance.

‘It was crucial for me to give those people their reference in time in a physical way, this is why I printed the photographs. I hope they can see themselves as part of this important moment in British history.’

Time don’t run here forms part of what Artur calls her Black Balloon Archive. She has been making this vast ongoing body of work since the 1990s, depicting people in Africa, and of the African and Caribbean diasporas. Examples from the Archive are displayed around this room.

‘In my work, I like to talk to people, not about them. When people look at my work, they are actually looking at my audience. It’s them I would like to reach, but everyone else is invited too.’

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Tate Modern
Natalie Bell Building Level 2 West

Getting Here

1 August 2022 – 12 November 2023

Free

Deana Lawson, Seagulls in Kitchen  2017

1/2
artworks in Liz Johnson Artur

More on this artwork

Deana Lawson, Baby Sleep  2009

2/2
artworks in Liz Johnson Artur

More on this artwork

Art in this room

L04302: Seagulls in Kitchen
Deana Lawson Seagulls in Kitchen 2017
L04303: Baby Sleep
Deana Lawson Baby Sleep 2009
Artwork
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