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EXHIBITIONS

Continuum, Denis Bowen (South Africa), Max Chapman (United Kingdom), Anthony Underhill (Australia) and Aubrey Williams (British Guiana). Grabowski Gallery, London, 18 October – 12 November 1960.

Image in Revolt, Frank Bowling and Derek Boshier, Grabowski Gallery, London, 5 October – 3 November 1962.

Commonwealth Art Today, Commonwealth Institute Art Gallery, Kensington High Street, London, 7 November 1962 – 13 January 1963.

GALLERY ONE – TEN YEARS, Gallery One, London, 19 August – 6 September 1963.

1st Commonwealth Biennale of Abstract Art, Frank Avray Wilson, James Boswell, Denis Bowen, Leslie Candappa, Max Chapman, George Claessen, Kenneth Coutts Smith, William Culbert, John Drawbridge, Bill Featherston, William Gear, Kamil Khan, Peter Lanyon, John Latham, Ken Moore, William Newcombe, David Partridge, Ahmed Parvez, Victor Pasmore, Michael Rothenstein, Ashu Roy, Ron Russell, Viren Sahai, Charles Spencer, Stapleton, Brian Wall, Aubrey Williams, Nancy Wynne-Jones and Bryan Wynter. Commonwealth Institute Art Gallery, Kensington High Street, London, 19 September – 13 October 1963.

Six Indian Painters, Gajanan D. Bhagwat, Balraj K. Khanna, Yashwant Mali, S. V. Rama Rao, Lancelot Ribeiro and Ibrahim Wagh. Tagore India Centre, London, 9–28 November 1964.

Avinash Chandra, Hamilton Galleries, London, 10–27 March 1965 .

Balraj Khanna, New Vision Centre, London, 18 October – 6 November 1965.

Appointment With Six, Aubrey Williams showing alongside Gwen Barnard, Pip Benveniste, Oswell Blakeston, Max Chapman and A. Oscar. Arun Art Centre, Arundel, West Sussex, 19 October – 5 November 1966.

Contemporary African Art, Camden Arts Centre, London, 10 August – 8 September 1969.

Caribbean Artists in England, Althea Bastien, Winston Branch, Owen R. Coombs, Karl Craig, Daphne Dennison, Art Derry, Errol Lloyd, Donald Locke, George Lynch, Althea McNish, Ronald Moody, Keith Simon, Vernon Tong, Ricardo Wilkins, Aubrey Williams, Llewellyn Xavier and Paul Dash (unlisted). Commonwealth Art Gallery, Kensington High Street, London, 22 January – 14 February 1971.

The Recent Paintings of Winston Branch, Carl Van Vechten Gallery, Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee, 14 October – 9 November 1973.

Frank Bowling, Center for Inter-American Relations, Park Avenue, New York, 28 November 1973 – 13 January 1974.

Winston Branch: Bilder 1976/77, DAAD, Berlin.

Festac’77: The work of the artists from the United Kingdom and Ireland. Winston Branch, Mercian Carrena, Uzo Egonu, Armet Francis, (Emmanuel) Taiwo Jegede, Neil Kenlock, Donald Locke, Cyprian Mandala, Ronald Moody, Ossie Murray, Sue Smock, Lance Watson and Aubrey Williams. Lagos, Nigeria, 1977.

Afro-Caribbean Art, Mohammed Ahmed Abdalla, Keith Ashton, Colin Barker, Lloyd George Blair, Frank Bowling, Linward Campbell, Jan Connell, Dam X, D. Dasri, Horace de Bourg, Gordon de la Mothe, Daphne Dennison, Art Derry, Barbara Douglas, Reynold Duncan, Anthony Gidden, Lubaina Himid, Merdelle Irving, Siddig El N’Goumi, Anthony Jadunath (his name appeared in the catalogue as Jadwnagh), Emmanuel Taiwo Jegede, Donald Locke, G. S. Lynch, Errol Lloyd, Cyprian Mandala, Althea McNish, Nadia Ming, Lloyd Nelson, Eugene Palmer, Bill Patterson, Rudi Patterson, Shaigi Rahim, Orville Smith, Jeffrey Rickard Trotman, Adesose Wallace, Lance Watson and Moo Young. Drum Arts Centre, Artists Market, 52 Earlham Street, London, WC2, 27 April – 25 May 1978.

Rainbow Art Group, Action Space, London, 22 May – 9 June 1979.

Exhibition of Paintings by IAUK Indian Artists living in U.K, Yeshwant Mali, Prafulla Mohanti, Lancelot Ribeiro, Suresh Vedak, Ibrahim Wagh and Mohammad Zakir. Burgh House Museum, New End Square, Hampstead, London NW3, 27 January – 24 February 1980.

Balraj Khanna: Paintings, October Gallery, London, 16 April – 10 May 1980.

Black Art an’ done: An Exhibition of Work by Young Black Artists, Eddie Chambers, Dominic Dawes, Andrew Hazel, Ian Palmer and Keith Piper. Wolverhampton Art Gallery, 9–27 June 1981.

India: Myth and Reality Aspects of Modern Indian Art, M F Husain, F N Souza, Satish Gujral, S H Raza, Akbar Padamsee, Ram Kumar, Mohan Samant, Tyeb Mehta, K G Subramanyan, Krishen Khanna, A Ramachandran, Bikash Bhattacharjee, Jogen Chowdhury, Rameshwar Broota, Ranbir Singh Kaleka, Gieve Patel, Sudhir Patwardhan, Nalini Malani, Mrinalini Mukherjee and Anish Kapoor. Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, 1982.

The Pan-Afrikan Connection (or in some instances, The Pan-Afrikan Connection) was title given to, or included in most of a series of exhibitions that took place between 1982 and 1984, each with a slightly differing line-up of contributing artists that included Eddie Chambers, Dominic Dawes, Andrew Hazell, Claudette Johnson, Wenda Lesley, Ian Palmer, Keith Piper, Donald Rodney, Marlene Smith and Janet Vernon. These exhibitions are marked with an asterix.

* Eddie Chambers, Dominic Dawes, Claudette Johnson, Wenda Leslie and Keith Piper. Africa Centre, London, 4 May–4 June 1982.

* Eddie Chambers, Dominic Dawes, Wenda Leslie, Keith Piper and Janet Vernon. Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, 27 June – 18 July 1982.

* Eddie Chambers, Keith Piper and Donald Rodney, Faculty of Art and Design, Trent Polytechnic, Nottingham, 25 – 29 October 25 1982.

* Eddie Chambers, Claudette Johnson, Keith Piper and Donald Rodney. 35 King Street Gallery, Bristol, 17–30 November 1982.

* Beyond The Pan-Afrikan Connection, Eddie Chambers and Keith Piper. Hexagon Gallery, Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham, 7 January – 3 February 1983.

* Eddie Chambers, Claudette Johnson, Keith Piper and Donald Rodney. Midland Group Nottingham, 15 January – 12 February 1983.

* Eddie Chambers, Claudette Johnson, Wenda Leslie, Keith Piper, Donald Rodney and Janet Vernon. Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry, 20 February – 20 March 1983.

* Eddie Chambers, Keith Piper and Donald Rodney. Africa Centre, London, 4 May – 2 June 1983.

Creation for Liberation, First Open Exhibition of Contemporary Black Art in Britain, St Matthew’s Meeting Place, Brixton, London, 20–30 July 1983.

Heart in Exile, Tyrone Bravo, Vanley Burke, Pogus Caesar, Dee Casco, Eddie Chambers, Adrian Compton, Shakka Dedi, Olive Desnoes, Terry Dyer, Carl Gabriel, Funsani Gentiles, Anum Iyapo, George Kelly, Cherry Lawrence, Ossie Murray, Pitika Ntuli, Joseph Olubu, Keith Piper, Barry Simpson, Marlene Smith, Wayne Tenyue and someone going under the name ‘Woodpecker’. The Black-Art Gallery, London, 4 September – 2 October 1983.

Five Black Women Artists, Sonia Boyce, Lubaina Himid, Claudette Johnson, Houria Niati and Veronica Ryan. Africa Centre, London, 6 September – 14 October 1983.

Black Woman Time Now, Brenda Agard, Sonia Boyce, Chila Burman, Jean Campbell, Margaret Cooper, Elizabeth Eugene, Lubaina Himid, Claudette Johnson, Mumtaz Karimjee, Cherry Lawrence, Houria Niati, Ingrid Pollard, Veronica Ryan, Andrea Telman and Leslee Wills. Battersea Arts Centre, London, November 30 – December 31 1983.

* An Exhibition of Radical Black Art, The Blk. Art Group, Battersea Arts Centre, London, 1–26 February 1984.

* An Exhibition of Radical Black Art, The Blk. Art Group, Winterbourne House, The University of Birmingham, 6 February – 1 March 1984.

Second Creation for Liberation Open Exhibition, Brixton Art Gallery, Brixton, London, 17 July – 8 August 1984.

Into the Open: New Paintings Prints and Sculptures by Contemporary Black Artists, Clement Bedeau, Sonia Boyce, Eddie Chambers, Pogus Caesar, Shakka Dedi, Uzo Egonu, Lubaina Himid, Gavin Jantjes, Claudette Johnson, Tom (as he was then known) Joseph, Juginder Lamba, Bill Ming, Tony Moo Young, Ossie Murray, Houria Niati, Ben Nsusha, Pitika Ntuli, Keith Piper, Ritchie Riley, Veronica Ryan, and Jorge Santos. Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield, 4 August – 9 September 1984.

Room at the Top, Sonia Boyce, Gerard de Thame, Mary Mabbutt, Paul Richards and Adrian Wiszniewski. Nicola Jacobs Gallery, 9 Cork Street, London. 6 February – 9 March 1985.

Mirror Reflecting Darkly, Brenda Agard, Zarina Bhimji, Chila Burman, Jennifer Comrie, Novette Cummings, Valentina Emenyeonu, Carole Enahoro, Elizabeth Jackson, Lalitha Jawah Irilal, Rita Keegan, Christine Luboga, Sue McFarlane, Olusola Oyeleye, Betty Vaughan Richards, Enyote Wanogho and Paula Williams. Brixton Art Gallery, London, June 18 – July 6 1985.

3rd Creation for Liberation Open Exhibition of Contemporary Art by Black Artists, GLC Brixton Recreation Centre, Brixton, London, 12 July – 3 August 1985.

The Thin Black Line, Brenda Agard, Chila Kumari Burman, Sutapa Biswas, Sonia Boyce, Lubaina Himid, Claudette Johnson, Ingrid Pollard, Veronica Ryan, Marlene Smith, Jennifer Comrie and Maud Sulter. Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), London, 15 November 1985 – 26 January 1986.

The First White Christmas and Other Empire Stories, Donald Rodney. Saltley Print & Media, Birmingham (S.P.A.M.). The exhibition opened on 9 December 1985, closing date unknown.

Some of Us Are Brave All of Us Are Strong, Jo Addo, Brenda Agard, Simone Alexander, Sonia Boyce, Lubaina Himid, Amanda Holiday, Clare Joseph, Eve-I Kadeena, Mowbray Odonkor, Marlene Smith, Maud Sulter and Audrey West. The Black-Art Gallery, London, 13 February – 15 March 1986.

Third World Within: An exhibition of the work of AfroAsian Artists in Britain. Rasheed Araeen, Saleem Arif, David A Bailey, Sutapa Biswas, Avtarjeet Dhanjal, Uzo Egonu, Mona Hatoum, Merdelle Irving, Gavin Jantjes, Houria Niati, Keith Piper and Kumiko Shimizu. Brixton Art Gallery, London, 31 March – 22 April 1986.

Unrecorded Truths, Brenda Agard, Simone Alexander, David A. Bailey, Sutapa Biswas, Sonia Boyce, Allan deSouza, Keith Piper, Donald Rodney and Marlene Smith. Lubaina Himid at The Elbow Room, London, 16 April – 16 May 1986

Caribbean Art Now: Europe’s first exhibition of contemporary Caribbean art, Commonwealth Institute Art Gallery, Kensington High Street, London, 17 June – 4 August 1986.

From Two Worlds, Rasheed Araeen, Saleem Arif, Franklyn Beckford, Zadok Ben-David, Zarina Bhimji, The Black Audio Film Collective, Sonia Boyce, Sokari Douglas Camp, Denzil Forrester, Lubaina Himid, Gavin Jantjes, Tam Joseph, Houria Niati, Keith Piper, Veronica Ryan and Shafique Uddin. Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, 30 July – 7 September 1986.

Caribbean expressions in Britain: an exhibition of contemporary art organised by Leicestershire Museums, Art Galleries and Records Service and selected by Pogus Caesar, Bill Ming and Aubrey Williams in celebration of Caribbean Focus 1986. Leicestershire Museum and Art Gallery, New Walk, Leicester, 16 August – 28 September 1986.

Conversations: An Exhibition of work by Sonia Boyce, The Black-Art Gallery, 3 September – 4 October 1986.

Recent Paintings, Sutapa Biswas. Horizon Gallery, London, 17 June – 11 July 1987.

Sonia Boyce, Air Gallery, London, 11 December 1986 – 25 January, 1987.

Double Vision: An exhibition of contemporary Afro-Caribbean Art, Franklyn Beckford, Margaret Cooper, Uzo Egonu, Amanda Hawthorne, Lee Hudson Simba, Debbie Hursefield, Tam Joseph, Johney Ohene, Keith Piper, Madge Spencer and Gregory Whyte. Cartwright Hall, Bradford, 8 November 1986 – 4 January 1987.

Sekiapu: Nigerian Masquerade With Sculpture by Sokari Douglas Camp, The Africa Centre, Covent Garden, London, 12 June – 2 July 1987.

The Image Employed: The use of narrative in Black art. Simone Alexander, Zarina Bhimji, Sutapa Biswas, Sonia Boyce, Chila Kumari Burman, Eddie Chambers, Jennifer Comrie, Amanda Holiday, Claudette Johnson, Tam Joseph, Trevor Matthison and Eddie George, Mowbray Odonkor, Keith Piper, Donald G Rodney, Marlene Smith, and Allan deSouza. Cornerhouse, Manchester, 13 June – 19 July 1987.

ADVENTURES CLOSE TO HOME: An Exhibition by Piper & Rodney, Pentonville Gallery, London, 6 August – 5 September 1987.

Creation for Liberation Open Exhibition: Art by Black Artists, Brixton Village, Brixton, London, 7 October – 17 November 1987.

From Modernism to Postmodernism - Rasheed Araeen: A Retrospective: 1959–1987, Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, 21 November 1987 – 9 January 1988.

SightSeers: Visions of Afrika and the diaspora. Part Two of Eye-SisAfrikan Women’s Photography, Afia Yekwai, Elizabeth Hughes, Ifeoma Onyefulu, Jheni Arboine and June Reid. The Black-Art Gallery, London, 3–19 December 1987.

The Essential Black Art, Rasheed Araeen, Zarina Bhimji, Sutapa Biswas, Sonia Boyce, Eddie Chambers, Allan de Souza, Mona Hatoum, Gavin Jantjes and Keith Piper. Chisenhale Gallery, London, 5 February – 5 March 1988.

Sonia Boyce: Recent Work, New Gallery, Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, 13 May – 26 June 1988.

Alali: sculpture by Sokari Douglas Camp, Bluecoat Gallery, Liverpool, 28 May – 2 July 1988 and City of Plymouth Museums & Art Gallery, Plymouth, 23 July – 3 September 1988.

Black Art: Plotting the Course, Oldham Art Gallery October 22 – December 3 1988 and touring.

The Other Story: Afro-Asian Artists in Post-War Britain, Rasheed Araeen, Saleem Arif, Frank Bowling, Sonia Boyce, Eddie Chambers, Avinash Chandra, Avtarjeet Dhanjal, Uzo Egonu, Iqbal Geoffrey, Mona Hatoum, Lubaina Himid, Gavin Jantjes, Balraj Khanna, Donald Locke, David Medalla, Ronald Moody, Ahmed Parvez, Ivan Peries, Keith Piper, A J Shemza, Kumiko Shimizu, F N Souza, Aubrey Williams and Li Yuan Chia. Curated by Rasheed Araeen for the Hayward Gallery, London, 29 November 1989 – 4 February 1990.

In Focus, Horizon Gallery, London. Bhajan Hunjan, Chila Kumari Burman, Shanti Thomas and Jagjit Chuhan, 14 February – 2 March 1990; Mumtaz Karimjee, Zarina Bhimji, Nudrat Afza and Pradipta Das, 7 – 23 March 1990; Mali, Shaffique Udeen, Sohail and Shareena Hill; 28 March – 13 April 1990; Suresh Vedak, Amal Ghosh, Prafulla Mohanti and Ibrahim Wagh, 24 January–9 February 1990.

The Potter’s Art: Ceramics by Chris Bramble, Jon Churchill, Tony Ogogo, and Madge Spencer, The Black-Art Gallery, London, 7 February – 24 March 1990.

Let the Canvas Come to Life With Dark Faces. Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry, 14 April – 29 May 1990 and touring.

Distinguishing Marks: Sonia Boyce, Allan deSouza, Shaheen Merali, Pitika Ntuli and Keith Piper. Bloomsbury Galleries, Institute of Education, University of London, London, 22 May – 9 June 1990.

Mali, Horizon Gallery, London, 29 August – 21 September 1990.

‘Ask me no Question…. I tell you no lie’, An exhibition of Painting & Sculpture Dedicated to the memory of Jo Olubo, The Black-Art Gallery, London, 6 September – 20 October 1990.

Denzil Forrester: Dub Transition, A Decade of Paintings 1980–1990, Harris Museum & Art Gallery, Preston, 22 September – 3 November 1990 and touring.

Interrogating Identity, Rasheed Araeen, Rebecca Belmore, Nadine Chan, Albert Chong, Allan de Souza, Jamelie Hassan, Mona Hatoum,. Roshini Kempadoo, Glenn Ligon, Whitfield Lovell, Lani Maestro, Lillian Mulero, Ming Mur-Ray, Keith Piper, Ingrid Pollard, Donald Rodney, Yinka Shonibare and Gary Simmons. Gray Art Gallery and Study Center, New York University, 12 March – 18 May 1991.

History and Identity: Seven Painters, Said Adrus, Medina Hammad, Godfrey Lee, Mowbray Odonkor, Eugene Palmer, Tony Phillips and Lesley Sanderson. Norwich Gallery, Norwich, 16 March – 11 May 1991.

Keith Piper, Step into the Arena: Notes on Black Masculinity & The Contest of Territory, Rochdale Art Gallery, 3 May – 1 June 1991.

Four X 4, Shaheen Merali, Houria Niati, Sher Rajah and Lesley Sanderson, Harris Museum and Art Gallery, Preston, 8 September – 17 October 1991; Oso Audu, Val Brown, Stephen Forde and Rita Keegan, Wolverhampton Art Gallery, 21 September – 2 November 1991; Medina Hammad, Richard Hylton, Tony Phillips and Folake Shoga, The City Gallery, Leicester, 9 October – 16 November 1991; Permindar Kaur, Virginia Nimarkoh, Alistair Raphael and Vincent Stokes, Arnolfini, Bristol, 12 October – 24 November 1991. A fifth exhibition, featuring several installations, presented at the Preston, Wolverhampton, Leicester and Bristol venues, was titled The Four X Retrospective and was shown at The Castle Museum Nottingham, 18 January – 1 March 1992.

Colours of Asia, Bhajan Hunjan, Kary Ka-che Kwok, Keith Khan, Samena Rana, Tehmina Shah, Veena Stephenson, and Ali Medhi Zaidi. The Black-Art Gallery, London, 1 February – 7 March 1992.

Barclays Young Artist Award 1992, Richard Ducker, Janice Howard, Andrew Kearney, Gabriel Klasmer, Joanna Lawrance, Lisa Richardson, Stefan Shankland, Yinka Shonibare and Mari Tachikawa. Serpentine Gallery, London, 5 February – 8 March, 1992.

Crossing Black Waters, Said Adrus, Anand Moy Banerji, Arpana Caur, Allan deSouza, Nina Edge, Sushanta Guha, Bhajan Hunjan, Manjeet Lamba, Shaheen Merali, Quddus Mirza, Samena Rana, Anwar Saeed and Sashidharan. City Gallery, Leicester, March 1992.

Zarina Bhimji: I will always be here, Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, 4 April – 9 May 1992 and touring.

In This Skin: Drawings by Claudette Johnson, The Black-Art Gallery, 27 May – 11 July 1992.

Black People and the British Flag, Cornerhouse, Manchester, May 8 – June 13 1993 and touring.

Goldsmiths B.A. Fine Art Nineteen 93, Goldsmiths College, 25–27 June 1993.

Faisal Abdu’Allah: Censored! From Nigger to Nubian, 198 Gallery, London, 10 June – 10 July 1993.

Transition of Riches, Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery, 2 September – 14 November 1993 and touring (part of South Asian Contemporary Visual Arts Festival, September – December 1993).

Beyond Destination: film, video and installation by South Asian artists, Maya Chowdhry, Sutapa Biswas, Alnoor Dewshi, Khaled Hakim, Shaheen Merali, Sher Rajah, Alia Syed and Tanya Syed. Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, 16 September – 19 October 1993.

Disrupted Borders: An intervention in definitions of boundaries, Shahidul Alam, Emily Anderson, Monika Baker, Karl Beveridge, Sutapa Biswas, Kaucyita Brooke, Sheba Chhachhi, Carol Conde, Darrel Ellis, Jamelie Hassan, Doug Ischar, Jorma Puranen, Samena Rana, Renee Tobe and Millie Watson. Arnolfini, Bristol, 18 September – 7 November 1993 and touring.

Eugene Palmer, Norwich Gallery, 15 November – 17 December 1993 and touring.

Double Dutch, Yinka Shonibare. Centre 181 Gallery, London, 2–25 February 1994.

Veronica Ryan: Compartments/Apart-ments, Camden Arts Centre, London, February 1995.

Mirage: Enigmas of Race, Difference and Desire, Lyle Ashton Harris, Sonia Boyce, Nina Edge, Ronald Fraser-Munro, Mario Gardner, Edward George and Trevor Mathieson, Renée Green, Isaac Julien, Keith Khan, Marcus Kuiland-Nazario, Marc Latamie, Susan Lewis, Glenn Ligon, Steve McQueen, Sarbjit Samra and Carmelita Tropicana. ICA, London, 12 May – 16 July 1995.

Seven Stories About Modern Art in Africa, Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, 27 September – 26 November 1995.

Africa: the Art of a Continent, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 4 October 1995 – 21 January 1996.

British Art Show 4, Manchester venues: Cornerhouse, Upper Campfield Market, Castlefield Gallery, City Art Galleries, Manchester Metropolitan Gallery, the Chinese Arts Centre and the Whitworth Gallery, 12 November 1995 – 4 February 1996 and touring.

Cold Comfort, Permindar Kaur. Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, 16 May – 22 June 1996.

Permindar Kaur Cold Comfort, Mead Gallery, Warwick Arts Centre, University of Warwick, 25 May – 29 June 1996.

Frank Bowling: Bowling on Through the Century, Leicester City Gallery, 11 September – 12 October 1996; Gallery II, University of Bradford, 13 January – 7 February 1997; De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea, 27 February – 31 March 1997; South Hill Park, Bracknell, 5 April – 10 May 1997; Midlands Arts Centre, 14 June – 27 July 1997; and Herbert Art Gallery and Museum, Coventry, 6 September – 26 October 1997.

Rhapsodies in Black: Art of the Harlem Renaissance, Hayward Gallery, London, 19 June – 17 August 1997 and touring

Documenta X, Exhibition of contemporary art, Kassel, Germany, 21 June – 28 September 1997.

Trade Routes: History and Geography, 2nd Johannesburg Biennale 1997, Artistic Director Okwui Enwezor, 12 October 1997 – 18 January 1998.

Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966–1996, Faisal Abdu’Allah, Said Adrus, Ajamu, Henrietta Atooma Alele, Hassan Aliyu, Marcia Bennett, Zarina Bhimji, Sutapa Biswas, Sylbert Bolton, Sonia Boyce, Winston Branch, Vanley Burke, Chila Kumari Burman, Sokari Douglas Camp, Anthony Daley, Allan deSouza, Godfried Donkor, Nina Edge, Uzo Egonu, Rotimi Fani-Kayode, Denzil Forrester, Armet Francis, Joy Gregory, Sunil Gupta, Lubaina Himid, Bhajan Hunjan, Meena Jafarey, Gavin Jantjes, Emmanuel Taiwo Jegede, Claudette Elaine Johnson, Mumtaz Karimjee, Rita Keegan, Fowokan George Kelly, Roshini Kempadoo, Juginder Lamba, Errol Lloyd, Jeni McKenzie, Althea McNish, David Medalla, Shaheen Merali, Bill Ming, Ronald Moody, Olu Oguibe, Eugene Palmer, Tony Phillips, Keith Piper, Ingrid Pollard, Franklyn Rodgers, Veronica Ryan, Lesley Sanderson, Folake Shoga, Yinka Shonibare, Gurminder Sikand, Maud Sulter, Danijah Tafari, Geraldine Walsh, and Aubrey Williams. Donald Rodney was included in the catalogue, but his work was not in the exhibition itself. Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, 14 October, 1997 – 15 March, 1998; Bronx Museum of the Arts, 15 October, 1997 – 15 March, 1998; Caribbean Cultural Center, Picturing England: The Photographic Narratives of Vanley Burke, 16 October 1997 – 15 March 1998.

Anwar Shemza, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, 12 November 1997 – 1 February 1998.

Chris Ofili, Southampton City Art Gallery, 9 April – 31 May 1998 and touring.

Tam Joseph: This is History, Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield, 7 March – 19 April 1998 and touring.

Aubrey Williams, Whitechapel Art Gallery, 12 June – 16 August 1998.

The Turner Prize 1998, An Exhibition of Work by the Shortlisted Artists, Tate Britain, London, 28 October 1998 – 10 January 1999.

Routes, Godfried Donkor, Juginder Lamba, Hew Locke, Johannes Phokela and Frances Richardson. Brunei Gallery, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, 22 January – 26 March 1999.

Steve McQueen, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, 30 January – 21 March 1999 and Kunsthalle, Zürich, 12 June – 15 August 1999.

Slave to Champ, Godfried Donkor. The Art Exchange Gallery, Nottingham, 1–31 October 1999.

The Turner Prize 1999: An Exhibition of Work by the Shortlisted Artists, Tate Britain, London, 20 October 1999 – 5 February 2000.

Tariq Alvi, Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, 12 January – 4 March 2001.

Denzil Forrester: Two Decades of Painting, 4 Victoria Street, Bristol, 4 June – 6 July, 2002.

Documenta XI, Exhibition of contemporary art, Kassel, Germany, 8 June – 15 September 2002.

Ronald Moody 1900 - 1984: A Reputation Restored, Tate Britain, London, 24 March – 30 May 2003.

Fault Lines: Contemporary African Art and Shifting Landscapes, part of the 50th International Art Exhibition, La Biennale de Venezia, Dreams and Conflicts: The Dictatorship of the Viewer, 15 June – 2 November 2003.

Eugene Palmer: Index, Wolsey Art Gallery, Christchurch Mansion, Ipswich, 17 January – 28 March 2004.

Archive Season: Zarina Bhimji, INIVA, London, 28 January – 6 March 2004.

Africa Remix: Contemporary Art of a Continent, Hayward Gallery, London, 10 February – 17 April 2005.

Hew Locke, New Art Gallery, Walsall, 29 April – 26 June 2005.

Barbara Walker: Louder Than Words, Unit 2 Gallery, London Metropolitan University, 18 November – 16 December 2006.

Next We Change Earth, Said Adrus, Elshaday Berhane, Michael Forbes, Samson Kambalu, Harjeet Kaur, Hetain Patel, Keith Piper, Nazir Tanbouli, Andrew Wright, Gary Stewart, Trevor Mathison and Obinna Nwasu. New Art Exchange, Nottingham, 6 September – 26 October 2008.

Chris Ofili, Tate Britain, London, 27 January – 16 May 2010

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye: Any Number of Preoccupations, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, 11 November 2010 – 13 March 2011.

RCA Black, Henry Moore Galleries, London, Faisal Abdu’Allah, Tessa Alexis, Charlie Allen, Catherine Anyango, Yemi Awosile, Kevin Bickham, Frank Bowling OBE, RA, Simone Brewster, Ndidi Ekubia, Joy Gregory, Paul Jones, Taslim Martin, Ekua McMorris, Althea McNish, Edward Niles, Darren Norman, Harold Offeh, Lawson Oyekan, Eileen Perrier, Caroline ‘Booops’ Sardine, Emamoke Ukeleghe and Barrington Watson. Royal College of Art, London, 31 August – 6 September 2011.

Migrations: Journeys into British Art, including work by Rasheed Araeen, Black Audio Film Collective, Frank Bowling OBE, RA, Sonia Boyce MBE, Avinash Chandra, Mona Hatoum, Lubaina Himid MBE, Kim Lim, Yuan-chia Li, Steve McQueen OBE, CBE, David Medalla, Ronald Moody, Rosalind Nashashibi, Keith Piper, Donald Rodney, Zineb Sedira, Anwar Jalal Shemza, Francis Newton Souza and Aubrey Williams. Tate Britain, London, 31 January – 12 August 2012.

We Face Forward: Art from West Africa Today, Manchester City Galleries, Whitworth Art Gallery and Gallery of Costume, Manchester, 2 June – 16 September 2012.

Restless Ribeiro: An Indian Artist in Britain, Asia House, London, 24 May – 29 June 2013.

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