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Vanley Burke

Vanley Burke (born 1951) is a British Jamaican photographer and artist. His photographs capture experiences of his community's arrival in Britain, the different landscapes and cultures he encountered, the different ways of survival and experiences of the wider African-Caribbean community.

Vanley Burke
Burke in February 2019
Born1951 (age 72–73)
Saint Thomas, Jamaica
NationalityBritish
Occupations
  • Photographer
  • Artist
Awards
Websitewww.vanley.co.uk

Life and work edit

Vanley Burke was born in St. Thomas, Jamaica, in 1951.[3] For his 10th birthday, he was sent a "Box Brownie" camera—a Kodak Brownie 127—by his mother, who in the late 1950s had gone to live in England,[4] while he remained with his aunt in St.Thomas.[5] In 1965,at the age of 14, he went to join his parents in the UK, leaving his radio to his aunt as a parting gift but taking his camera with him.[6][7]

Burke seriously started photography around 1967, making a conscious decision to document the black community and lifestyle in England. His first studio was in Grove Lane, Handsworth, Birmingham.[5]

His photographs capture experiences of his community's arrival in Britain, the different landscapes and cultures he encountered, the different ways of survival and experiences of the wider African-Caribbean community. His photography sought to counteract any perception of negative or stereotypical imagery of black people found in mainstream media. His photographs represented members of the black community back to themselves in intimate portrayal and were taken from his perspective as an integral member of the community as opposed to basic documentary images perceived from "outsiders". Burke's interests have expanded to include other communities in the city and their experiences.

Burke's first notable exhibition, Handsworth from the Inside, was held at Ikon Gallery in Birmingham, and then the Commonwealth Institute in London in 1983. Since then his work has been exhibited at Light House, Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery, The Black Arts Gallery in London, Cornerhouse in Manchester and Walsall Museum and Art Gallery, and he has held solo exhibitions abroad in New York City and Mali. In addition to traditional galleries and other such settings, Burke has purposely exhibited his work in locations more easily accessible to black audiences such as community centres, clubs, pubs, churches, pool halls and schools.[8] The 1993 exhibition From Negative Stereotype to Positive Image, organised by Birmingham Central Library, included his work alongside that of three other Birmingham photographers: Sir Benjamin Stone (1838–1914), Ernest Dyche (1887–1973) and Claudette Holmes (born 1962).[9] Burke was a significant contributor of imagery to the Birmingham photography magazine and collective, Ten.8.

Burke's work has also been used in documentaries (including Handsworth Songs, 1986),[10] television programmes, books and on record sleeves such as UB40's "Geffrey Morgan". A biography entitled A Retrospective, on the life and works of Burke, was published in 1993 by Lawrence & Wishart, edited by Mark Sealy.[11] In 1990, Burke received a call from a friend in South Africa saying: "South Africa is going to be free and we need you here." During two visits to the country, in 1990 then in 1996, Burke photographed the life of black South Africans just after Nelson Mandela's release from prison and the subsequent ANC celebrations hosted and attended by Mandela for the anti-Apartheid veterans.

The "Vanley Burke Archive" maintained by Birmingham City Council is a constantly growing photographic and documentary community resource. Complementing his photographic documentation, Burke collects material that samples and evidences developments and activities of the black community in Britain. The material comprises things such as posters or flyers and funeral cards that may have been seen as disposable at the time of their creation but take greater significance when maintained in the context of his archive. They evidence and provide insight of the daily activities and everyday lives, cultural and religious beliefs, the arts, political ideals, health and other facets affecting the black community and others in Birmingham and in Britain. Burke is still documenting the black community in the UK and has more recently worked on a number of projects including an exhibition and publication project documenting the Asian community in Birmingham.[12]

Having won a Kodak Award as early as 1984, he has also received an Honorary Doctorate from Leicester University, UK, in 2007, and the Wolverhampton School of Art and Design awarded him an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Art in 2009[13] at their award ceremony. Stuart Hall endorsed that:

"the personal, social and economic life of black people as they arrived, settled and became established in British society – is being constructed, given a certain meaning, significance, value, by Burke's camera eye, not merely 'captured'."

Burke said in September 2005:

"It's just about the ability to see something others may be unable to see, in terms of the value. Then show people. They need to see their contribution to this community. I mean, they have been contributing to this thing from the 50s and it's gone beyond, but there is no reference anywhere. It's about having themselves reflected, they are so desperate to see themselves. But this will be there, it isn't going anywhere....".

The British Library conducted an oral history interview (C459/217) with Burke in 2014 for its Oral History of British Photography collection.[14]

In 2015, Burke recreated the front room of his home in Birmingham's Ikon Gallery, for a show characterised as "a living archive of untold black British history".[15]

In 2018, the site-specific installation Vanley Burke: 5000 Miles and 70 Years was part of the events at mac, Birmingham, commemorating the 70th anniversary of the arrival of the HMT Empire Windrush from the Caribbean to the UK.[16][17]

Burke was a guest on BBC Radio 4's programme Desert Island Discs, first broadcast on 4 November 2018, when he was interviewed by Lauren Laverne and explained his motivation for documenting culture and history.[18]

In 2021, London's National Portrait Gallery acquired a portrait of Burke by photographer Pogus Caesar.[19]

Burke was the recipient of a 2022 Paul Hamlyn Award for his contribution to Visual Art.[20]

Personal life edit

Burke is a father to three sons, a grandfather to six children.[citation needed]

Exhibitions edit

Solo exhibitions edit

Group exhibitions edit

Publications edit

Books by Burke edit

  • Sealy, M., and S. Hall (1993), Vanley Burke A Retrospective. London: Lawrence & Wishart. ISBN 0853157839.
  • Vanley Burke: by the Rivers of Birminam. Birmingham: mac, Birmingham, 2012. Edited by Lynda. ISBN 978-1907796135. With essays by Morris and Eddie Chambers. Published to accompany an exhibition at mac, Birmingham.
  • Burke, V., and James, P. (2015), At Home With Vanley Burke. Birmingham: Ikon. ISBN 9781904864981.

Books with contributions by Burke edit

  • Archer-Straw, Petrine, David A. Bailey and R. Powell (2005), Back to Black: Art, Cinema & the Racial Imaginary. London: Whitechapel Art Gallery. ISBN 0854881425
  • Burke, V., F. Bulbulia and F. Isiakpere (1997), Council of the Elders, A Tribute to the Veterans of South Africa. South Africa: Minaj. ISBN 9783366572
  • Campany, D., L. Morris, M. Nash and T. Barson (2007), Making History: Art and Documentary in Britain from 1929 to Now. London: Tate. ISBN 1854376829
  • Eshun, K., and A. Sagar (2007), The Ghost of Songs – The Art of Black Audio Film Collective. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 1846310148
  • Faulkner, S., and A. Ramamurthy (2006), Visual Culture And Decolonisation in Britain (British Art and Visual Culture Since 1750 New Readings). London: Ashgate Pub Co. ISBN 0754640027
  • Grosvenor, I., R. McLean and S. Roberts (2002), Making Connections: Birmingham Black International History. Birmingham: BPBFG. ISBN 0954371305
  • Grunenberg, C., and R. Knifton (2007), Centre of the Creative Universe: Liverpool and the Avant-garde. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 1846310814
  • James, P., and C. Upton (2003), A World City – Birmingham. Birmingham: Birmingham City Council Department of Leisure & Co. ISBN 0709302436
  • Mellor, D. (2007), No Such Thing as Society: Photography in Britain 1967–1987. Hayward. ISBN 1853322652
  • Onnen, S. (2007), Flava: Wedge Curatorial Projects 1997–2007. Canada: WCP. ISBN 097833700X
  • Sirmans, M., and J. Beauchamp-Byrd (1997), Transforming the Crown: African, Asian, and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966–1996. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Tulloch, C. (2004), Black Style. London: Victoria & Albert Museum. ISBN 1851774246
  • Williams, V., and S. Bright (2007), How We Are: Photographing Britain. London: Tate. ISBN 1854377140

Awards edit

Further reading edit

  • Kieran Connell, Black Handsworth: Race in 1980s Britain (2019), chapter 2.

References edit

  1. ^ "The Royal Photographic Society Unveils its 2021 Award Winners". PetaPixel. 26 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  2. ^ "£600,000 awarded to new recipients of Awards for Artists 2022". Paul Hamlyn Foundation. 10 November 2022. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  3. ^ Andreasson, Karin (25 June 2014). "Vanley Burke's best shot: African Liberation Day in Birmingham, 1977". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  4. ^ Young, Graham (15 July 2014). "Celebration of an extraordinary decade in history of city gallery". Birmingham Post.
  5. ^ a b Watkins, Jonathan, ed. (2015). At Home with Vanley Burke. Ikon. ISBN 9781904864981.
  6. ^ "Vanley Burke", Autograph ABP.
  7. ^ "BBC – Birmingham Your Community – Black History Month – Vanley Burke". BBC. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  8. ^ Legacy Archives, Tyne and Wear. "Spotlight on ..."
  9. ^ James, Peter (2002). "From Negative Stereotype to Positive Image". In Alison Donnell (ed.). Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture. Routledge. pp. 119–120. ISBN 978-1-134-70025-7.
  10. ^ "Vanley Burke". Diaspora Artists. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  11. ^ Sealy, Mark (1 November 1993). A Retrospective. Lawrence & Wishart. ISBN 0-85315-783-9.
  12. ^ "The Vanley Burke Archive". Birmingham City Council.
  13. ^ "Vanley Burke, School of Art and Design: Honorary Degree of Doctor of Art". University of Wolverhampton.
  14. ^ Burke, Vanley (1 of 4) Oral History of British Photography, The British Library Board, 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  15. ^ Bakare, Lanre (12 August 2021). "Interview | 'We're not just passing through': how photographer Vanley Burke immortalised black Britain". The Guardian.
  16. ^ "Beyond Windrush 70th anniversary events to be held at MAC". Midlands What's On. 26 April 2018. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  17. ^ "'Beyond Windrush' launches with Vanley Burke and Benjamin Zephaniah". 10 May 2018. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  18. ^ "Vanley Burke", Desert Island Discs, BBC Radio 4, 9 November 2018.
  19. ^ "NPG x201363; Vanley Burke – Portrait – National Portrait Gallery". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
  20. ^ "Meeting Point artist Vanley Burke receives prestigious 2022 Paul Hamlyn Award". Arts & Heritage. 22 November 2022. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Vanley Burke photographer". Ben Uri Research Unit. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  22. ^ "Vanley Burke — By The Rivers of Birminam | 26 July 2013 – 12 October 2013". Departure Lounge. Luton. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  23. ^ Ellis-Petersen, Hannah (21 July 2015). "Playing house: why Vanley Burke moved his entire flat into a gallery". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  24. ^ "Vanley Burke exhibition - Home..." Birmingham Hippodrome. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  25. ^ "New photography exhibition by Vanley Burke launches at Birmingham Hippodrome". Fairy Powered Productions. 17 January 2020. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  26. ^ Parkes, Diane (28 April 2022). "Blood And Fire: Vanley Burke exhibition on show at Soho House". What's On. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  27. ^ Birmingham Museums Trust. "Blood and Fire: Our Journey through Vanley Burke's History". Birmingham 2022 Festival, Commonwealth Games. Commonwealth Sport. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  28. ^ "Vanley Burke – Showcase: A Gift To Birmingham". Ikon Gallery. 2022. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  29. ^ "Vanley Burke: A Gift to Birmingham, 16 Dec 2022 – 31 Mar 2023". ArtRabbit. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  30. ^ "The Meaning of Style: Black British Style, and the underlying political and social environment". Diaspora Artists. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  31. ^ Robinson, Jeannie (1 March 2010). "Reviews & Culture | The Meaning of Style". Socialist Worker. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  32. ^ Bakare, Lanre (11 June 2019). "UK galleries have embraced black artists, says exhibition curator". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  33. ^ Stubbs, Alex (15 July 2021). "Don't Blame the Blacks Exhibition Highlights Extraordinary Activism of Oswald George Powe". Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  34. ^ Luke, Ben (29 November 2021). "Life Between Islands at Tate Britain review: a captivating collection of cracking Caribbean art". Evening Standard.
  35. ^ Cumming, Laura (5 December 2021). "Life Between Islands review – a mind-altering portrait of British Caribbean life through art". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  36. ^ "Rebellion to Romance Exhibition". Jamaica Society Leeds. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  37. ^ Rooke, Hannah (29 October 2021). "The Royal Photographic Society announces its 2021 award winners". digitalcameraworld. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  38. ^ "Awards for Artists | Vanley Burke". Paul Hamlyn Foundation.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Sophie Cross, "BLACK BRUM; From the Swinging 60s to Mandela and the Handsworth: riots, Vanley Burke has chronicled black history - through a lens", Sunday Mercury (Birmingham, England), 31 January 2010, via The Free Library.
  • "Fightback: Vanley Burke's black Birmingham – in pictures" in The Guardian, 25 Mayy 2017.
  • "Artist Profile: Vanley Burke", Arts Council Collection, 1 October 2019.

vanley, burke, born, 1951, british, jamaican, photographer, artist, photographs, capture, experiences, community, arrival, britain, different, landscapes, cultures, encountered, different, ways, survival, experiences, wider, african, caribbean, community, burk. Vanley Burke born 1951 is a British Jamaican photographer and artist His photographs capture experiences of his community s arrival in Britain the different landscapes and cultures he encountered the different ways of survival and experiences of the wider African Caribbean community Vanley BurkeBurke in February 2019Born1951 age 72 73 Saint Thomas JamaicaNationalityBritishOccupationsPhotographer ArtistAwardsHonorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society 1 Paul Hamlyn Award 2 Burke s voice source source source recorded February 2019Websitewww wbr vanley wbr co wbr uk Contents 1 Life and work 2 Personal life 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Solo exhibitions 3 2 Group exhibitions 4 Publications 4 1 Books by Burke 4 2 Books with contributions by Burke 5 Awards 6 Further reading 7 References 8 External linksLife and work editVanley Burke was born in St Thomas Jamaica in 1951 3 For his 10th birthday he was sent a Box Brownie camera a Kodak Brownie 127 by his mother who in the late 1950s had gone to live in England 4 while he remained with his aunt in St Thomas 5 In 1965 at the age of 14 he went to join his parents in the UK leaving his radio to his aunt as a parting gift but taking his camera with him 6 7 Burke seriously started photography around 1967 making a conscious decision to document the black community and lifestyle in England His first studio was in Grove Lane Handsworth Birmingham 5 His photographs capture experiences of his community s arrival in Britain the different landscapes and cultures he encountered the different ways of survival and experiences of the wider African Caribbean community His photography sought to counteract any perception of negative or stereotypical imagery of black people found in mainstream media His photographs represented members of the black community back to themselves in intimate portrayal and were taken from his perspective as an integral member of the community as opposed to basic documentary images perceived from outsiders Burke s interests have expanded to include other communities in the city and their experiences Burke s first notable exhibition Handsworth from the Inside was held at Ikon Gallery in Birmingham and then the Commonwealth Institute in London in 1983 Since then his work has been exhibited at Light House Birmingham Museum amp Art Gallery The Black Arts Gallery in London Cornerhouse in Manchester and Walsall Museum and Art Gallery and he has held solo exhibitions abroad in New York City and Mali In addition to traditional galleries and other such settings Burke has purposely exhibited his work in locations more easily accessible to black audiences such as community centres clubs pubs churches pool halls and schools 8 The 1993 exhibition From Negative Stereotype to Positive Image organised by Birmingham Central Library included his work alongside that of three other Birmingham photographers Sir Benjamin Stone 1838 1914 Ernest Dyche 1887 1973 and Claudette Holmes born 1962 9 Burke was a significant contributor of imagery to the Birmingham photography magazine and collective Ten 8 Burke s work has also been used in documentaries including Handsworth Songs 1986 10 television programmes books and on record sleeves such as UB40 s Geffrey Morgan A biography entitled A Retrospective on the life and works of Burke was published in 1993 by Lawrence amp Wishart edited by Mark Sealy 11 In 1990 Burke received a call from a friend in South Africa saying South Africa is going to be free and we need you here During two visits to the country in 1990 then in 1996 Burke photographed the life of black South Africans just after Nelson Mandela s release from prison and the subsequent ANC celebrations hosted and attended by Mandela for the anti Apartheid veterans The Vanley Burke Archive maintained by Birmingham City Council is a constantly growing photographic and documentary community resource Complementing his photographic documentation Burke collects material that samples and evidences developments and activities of the black community in Britain The material comprises things such as posters or flyers and funeral cards that may have been seen as disposable at the time of their creation but take greater significance when maintained in the context of his archive They evidence and provide insight of the daily activities and everyday lives cultural and religious beliefs the arts political ideals health and other facets affecting the black community and others in Birmingham and in Britain Burke is still documenting the black community in the UK and has more recently worked on a number of projects including an exhibition and publication project documenting the Asian community in Birmingham 12 Having won a Kodak Award as early as 1984 he has also received an Honorary Doctorate from Leicester University UK in 2007 and the Wolverhampton School of Art and Design awarded him an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Art in 2009 13 at their award ceremony Stuart Hall endorsed that the personal social and economic life of black people as they arrived settled and became established in British society is being constructed given a certain meaning significance value by Burke s camera eye not merely captured Burke said in September 2005 It s just about the ability to see something others may be unable to see in terms of the value Then show people They need to see their contribution to this community I mean they have been contributing to this thing from the 50s and it s gone beyond but there is no reference anywhere It s about having themselves reflected they are so desperate to see themselves But this will be there it isn t going anywhere The British Library conducted an oral history interview C459 217 with Burke in 2014 for its Oral History of British Photography collection 14 In 2015 Burke recreated the front room of his home in Birmingham s Ikon Gallery for a show characterised as a living archive of untold black British history 15 In 2018 the site specific installation Vanley Burke 5000 Miles and 70 Years was part of the events at mac Birmingham commemorating the 70th anniversary of the arrival of the HMT Empire Windrush from the Caribbean to the UK 16 17 Burke was a guest on BBC Radio 4 s programme Desert Island Discs first broadcast on 4 November 2018 when he was interviewed by Lauren Laverne and explained his motivation for documenting culture and history 18 In 2021 London s National Portrait Gallery acquired a portrait of Burke by photographer Pogus Caesar 19 Burke was the recipient of a 2022 Paul Hamlyn Award for his contribution to Visual Art 20 Personal life editBurke is a father to three sons a grandfather to six children citation needed Exhibitions editSolo exhibitions edit This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Vanley Burke news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Pan African Congress Rally 1979 Manchester Handsworth from inside 1983 Commonwealth Institute Black Art Gallery London Connections 1986 Open Eye Gallery Liverpool 21 The World in Wolverhampton 1986 Wolverhampton Museum and Art Gallery 21 Sundays are Bloody Awful 1987 mac Birmingham 21 Carnival in Exile 1987 The Cave Birmingham 21 Racism in Our Cities 1991 Peterborough Arts Council 21 No Time for Flowers Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery 1991 Coventry Museum and Art Gallery The Journey Walsall Art Gallery 1994 Watershed Bristol 21 Five Years A Life Time 1998 EMACA Nottingham Nottingham Playhouse Nkunzi Photographs of Birmingham and South Africa 1998 Soho House Birmingham 21 Redemptions Songs 2002 Symphony Hall Birmingham 21 Living Through 2004 Optima Housing Association Birmingham Moving Home 2004 Light House Media Centre Wolverhampton 21 INVISIBILE Identity Disability Culture Somaliland 2005 Birmingham Central Library Birmingham 21 Schools Colleges Pubs and Church 2006 Handsworth Park Birmingham 21 By the Rivers of Birminam 2012 mac Birmingham 22 Handsworth Culture Swap with Burke 2013 Soho House Birmingham At Home With Vanley Burke 2015 Ikon Gallery Birmingham 23 Home 2020 Birmingham Hippodrome 24 25 Blood amp Fire Our Journey Through Vanley Burke s History 2022 Soho House Museum Birmingham 26 27 A Gift to Birmingham 2022 Ikon Gallery Birmingham 23 March 2022 3 April 2022 Handsworth Library 16 December 2022 31 March 2023 28 29 Group exhibitions edit From Negative Stereotype to Positive Image Birmingham Central Library 1993 The Meaning of Style Black British Style and the underlying political and social environment New Art Exchange 16 January 10 April 2010 30 31 Get Up Stand Up Now Somerset House London 2019 32 Don t Blame the Blacks Nottingham Castle 2021 33 Life Between Islands Caribbean British Art 1950s Now Tate Britain London 2021 22 34 35 Rebellion to Romance Leeds Central Library 2022 36 Publications editBooks by Burke edit Sealy M and S Hall 1993 Vanley Burke A Retrospective London Lawrence amp Wishart ISBN 0853157839 Vanley Burke by the Rivers of Birminam Birmingham mac Birmingham 2012 Edited by Lynda ISBN 978 1907796135 With essays by Morris and Eddie Chambers Published to accompany an exhibition at mac Birmingham Burke V and James P 2015 At Home With Vanley Burke Birmingham Ikon ISBN 9781904864981 Books with contributions by Burke edit Archer Straw Petrine David A Bailey and R Powell 2005 Back to Black Art Cinema amp the Racial Imaginary London Whitechapel Art Gallery ISBN 0854881425 Burke V F Bulbulia and F Isiakpere 1997 Council of the Elders A Tribute to the Veterans of South Africa South Africa Minaj ISBN 9783366572 Campany D L Morris M Nash and T Barson 2007 Making History Art and Documentary in Britain from 1929 to Now London Tate ISBN 1854376829 Eshun K and A Sagar 2007 The Ghost of Songs The Art of Black Audio Film Collective Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 1846310148 Faulkner S and A Ramamurthy 2006 Visual Culture And Decolonisation in Britain British Art and Visual Culture Since 1750 New Readings London Ashgate Pub Co ISBN 0754640027 Grosvenor I R McLean and S Roberts 2002 Making Connections Birmingham Black International History Birmingham BPBFG ISBN 0954371305 Grunenberg C and R Knifton 2007 Centre of the Creative Universe Liverpool and the Avant garde Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 1846310814 James P and C Upton 2003 A World City Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham City Council Department of Leisure amp Co ISBN 0709302436 Mellor D 2007 No Such Thing as Society Photography in Britain 1967 1987 Hayward ISBN 1853322652 Onnen S 2007 Flava Wedge Curatorial Projects 1997 2007 Canada WCP ISBN 097833700X Sirmans M and J Beauchamp Byrd 1997 Transforming the Crown African Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966 1996 Chicago University of Chicago Press Tulloch C 2004 Black Style London Victoria amp Albert Museum ISBN 1851774246 Williams V and S Bright 2007 How We Are Photographing Britain London Tate ISBN 1854377140Awards edit2021 Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society Bristol 37 2022 Paul Hamlyn Award 38 Further reading editKieran Connell Black Handsworth Race in 1980s Britain 2019 chapter 2 References edit The Royal Photographic Society Unveils its 2021 Award Winners PetaPixel 26 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2022 600 000 awarded to new recipients of Awards for Artists 2022 Paul Hamlyn Foundation 10 November 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Andreasson Karin 25 June 2014 Vanley Burke s best shot African Liberation Day in Birmingham 1977 The Guardian Retrieved 1 January 2022 Young Graham 15 July 2014 Celebration of an extraordinary decade in history of city gallery Birmingham Post a b Watkins Jonathan ed 2015 At Home with Vanley Burke Ikon ISBN 9781904864981 Vanley Burke Autograph ABP BBC Birmingham Your Community Black History Month Vanley Burke BBC Retrieved 1 January 2022 Legacy Archives Tyne and Wear Spotlight on James Peter 2002 From Negative Stereotype to Positive Image In Alison Donnell ed Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture Routledge pp 119 120 ISBN 978 1 134 70025 7 Vanley Burke Diaspora Artists Retrieved 27 January 2023 Sealy Mark 1 November 1993 A Retrospective Lawrence amp Wishart ISBN 0 85315 783 9 The Vanley Burke Archive Birmingham City Council Vanley Burke School of Art and Design Honorary Degree of Doctor of Art University of Wolverhampton Burke Vanley 1 of 4 Oral History of British Photography The British Library Board 2014 Retrieved 1 February 2018 Bakare Lanre 12 August 2021 Interview We re not just passing through how photographer Vanley Burke immortalised black Britain The Guardian Beyond Windrush 70th anniversary events to be held at MAC Midlands What s On 26 April 2018 Retrieved 27 January 2023 Beyond Windrush launches with Vanley Burke and Benjamin Zephaniah 10 May 2018 Retrieved 27 January 2023 Vanley Burke Desert Island Discs BBC Radio 4 9 November 2018 NPG x201363 Vanley Burke Portrait National Portrait Gallery National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 26 April 2021 Meeting Point artist Vanley Burke receives prestigious 2022 Paul Hamlyn Award Arts amp Heritage 22 November 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k Vanley Burke photographer Ben Uri Research Unit Retrieved 3 January 2023 Vanley Burke By The Rivers of Birminam 26 July 2013 12 October 2013 Departure Lounge Luton Retrieved 2 January 2023 Ellis Petersen Hannah 21 July 2015 Playing house why Vanley Burke moved his entire flat into a gallery The Guardian Retrieved 1 January 2022 Vanley Burke exhibition Home Birmingham Hippodrome Retrieved 3 January 2023 New photography exhibition by Vanley Burke launches at Birmingham Hippodrome Fairy Powered Productions 17 January 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Parkes Diane 28 April 2022 Blood And Fire Vanley Burke exhibition on show at Soho House What s On Retrieved 2 January 2023 Birmingham Museums Trust Blood and Fire Our Journey through Vanley Burke s History Birmingham 2022 Festival Commonwealth Games Commonwealth Sport Retrieved 3 January 2023 Vanley Burke Showcase A Gift To Birmingham Ikon Gallery 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Vanley Burke A Gift to Birmingham 16 Dec 2022 31 Mar 2023 ArtRabbit Retrieved 2 January 2023 The Meaning of Style Black British Style and the underlying political and social environment Diaspora Artists Retrieved 27 January 2023 Robinson Jeannie 1 March 2010 Reviews amp Culture The Meaning of Style Socialist Worker Retrieved 27 January 2023 Bakare Lanre 11 June 2019 UK galleries have embraced black artists says exhibition curator The Guardian Retrieved 1 January 2022 Stubbs Alex 15 July 2021 Don t Blame the Blacks Exhibition Highlights Extraordinary Activism of Oswald George Powe Retrieved 3 January 2023 Luke Ben 29 November 2021 Life Between Islands at Tate Britain review a captivating collection of cracking Caribbean art Evening Standard Cumming Laura 5 December 2021 Life Between Islands review a mind altering portrait of British Caribbean life through art The Guardian Retrieved 31 December 2021 Rebellion to Romance Exhibition Jamaica Society Leeds Retrieved 11 August 2022 Rooke Hannah 29 October 2021 The Royal Photographic Society announces its 2021 award winners digitalcameraworld Retrieved 7 January 2022 Awards for Artists Vanley Burke Paul Hamlyn Foundation External links editOfficial website Sophie Cross BLACK BRUM From the Swinging 60s to Mandela and the Handsworth riots Vanley Burke has chronicled black history through a lens Sunday Mercury Birmingham England 31 January 2010 via The Free Library Fightback Vanley Burke s black Birmingham in pictures in The Guardian 25 Mayy 2017 Artist Profile Vanley Burke Arts Council Collection 1 October 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vanley Burke amp oldid 1201520056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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