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Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 1

Britain’s black history explored by young photographers

5th November 2024

Photography students curated a pop-up archive of 19th century photograph's portraying Britain’s black history.

The project was arranged with the curatorial team of London's Autograph gallery.

Established in 1988, Autograph’s mission is to champion the work of artists who use photography and film to highlight questions of race, representation, human rights and social justice. Every year they engage hundreds of thousands of people locally, nationally and globally at their gallery in east London, digitally and through projects taking place in partner spaces.

Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 3
Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 3

Autograph visits educational institutions with their ‘Black Chronicles Exhibition in a Box’, a powerful educational tool to facilitate conversations and lesson plans around identity, diverse histories and photography.

Barking & Dagenham College’s photography students got to curate a pop-up archive display with the expert guidance of professional curators from the gallery; the resulting exhibition contains reproductions from 19th century photographs, portraying people of African, Caribbean and South Asian descent during the Victorian era in Britain.

Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 4
Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 4

The photographs include portraits of performers, politicians, dignitaries, servicemen and women, royalty and missionaries, known personalities and unidentified individuals.

The images highlight an important and complex black presence in Britain before 1948, a watershed moment often cited as the beginning of the emergence of a multicultural modern British society after the HMT Empire Windrush brought the first large group of West Indian migrants to Britain. Produced in commercial studios during the second half of the nineteenth century, many of the images included in the resource lay buried deep within the archives for decades - unseen for more than 125 years.


Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 2
Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 2

David Bennett, Programme Leader, Photography at Barking & Dagenham College said: “The Exhibition In a Box encouraged my students to critically analyse and engage with a unique collection of historical photographs, exploring how they present different, under-explored perspectives on British cultural history.

“It was wonderful to see both year groups coming together to work with curators from this important cultural institution and to discuss images of race and identity, and to work as a collective to curate a display of archival images for the college to see and learn about Black history in a visual way.”

The exhibition is on display in the photography department of the College until 20 November 2024. To arrange a visit please email david.bennett@bdc.ac.uk.

Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 5
Photography students curated a pop up archive of 19th century photographs 5

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