Isaac Julien's Art Explores Race, Identity, and Freedom.

TL;DR Summary
Tate Britain is hosting a career retrospective of British artist and filmmaker Isaac Julien, showcasing his boundary-stretching works addressing racism, homophobia, migration, and colonialism. The exhibition, titled "What Freedom Is to Me," features five single-screen films from the 1980s and six sumptuous installations, exhibited within a hexagonal structure designed by the architect David Adjaye. The exhibition is the largest of Julien's work ever staged in his home country and highlights his profound engagement with musicians, dancers, writers, and thinkers.
Topics:entertainment#arts#career-retrospective#film-installations#isaac-julien#social-justice#tate-britain
- Looking for Freedom, Isaac Julien Comes Home The New York Times
- Isaac Julien Show At Tate Britain Is Like A Punch From A Velvet Glove Towleroad
- Isaac Julien Tate retrospective: 'What Freedom Is to Me' | Wallpaper Wallpaper*
- Isaac Julien review – lithe bodies, a lynching and a televisual paean to lust The Guardian
- Sir Isaac Julien: 'The issues are still here,' says artist exploring race and identity since 1980s Channel 4 News
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
2
Time Saved
9 min
vs 10 min read
Condensed
96%
1,807 → 79 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on The New York Times