Art Term

Diaspora

Diaspora is a term used to describe movements in population from one country to another and is often cited in discussions about identity

In relation to art, the term diaspora is used to discuss artists who have migrated from one part of the world to another, (or whose families have), and who express their diverse experiences of culture and identity in the work they make; often expressing alternative narratives, and challenging the ideas and structures of the established art world.

Stuart Hall’s ideas on identity

Jamaican-born cultural theorist and sociologist Stuart Hall, Widely known as ‘godfather of multiculturalism’, published an important essay called Cultural identity and Diaspora in 1990. In it he addresses issues of identity in relation to cultural practice and production and explains the experience of the migrant as one of dislocation, displacement and hybridity (a mix of experience and cultures). Through his investigations, based on the experiences of the Caribbean diaspora, he came to the conclusion that individuals have more than one identity: they have one that is based on similarities and a unity which comes from belonging to a shared culture; and one that is based on an active process of identification, that responds to points of difference and is therefore always evolving through ‘a continuous play of history, culture and power.’

This has become a potent subject in art and can be related to movements in art like relational aesthetics and altermodern.

  • Relational aesthetics

    Term created by curator Nicolas Bourriaud in the 1990s to describe the tendency to make art based on, or inspired by, human relations and their social context

  • Altermodern

    Altermodern is a term coined by curator Nicolas Bourriaud in 2009, to describe art made as a reaction against standardisation and commercialism, in the context of globalisation

  • Identity politics

    Identity politics is the term used to describe an anti-authoritarian political and cultural movement that gained prominence in the USA and Europe in the mid-1980s, asking questions about identity, repression, inequality and injustice and often focusing on the experience of marginalised groups

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Selected artists in the collection

Selected artworks in the collection

Diaspora at Tate

  • Tate Modern
    Exhibition

    Mona Hatoum

    4 May – 21 Aug 2016

    A comprehensive exploration into 35 years of Hatoum's work in Britain, from her early performance and video works to her sculpture and large-scale installation

  • Tate Britain
    Exhibition

    Migrations: Journeys into British Art

    31 Jan – 12 Aug 2012

    Migration at Tate Britain explores British art through the theme of migration from 1500 to the present day

  • Tate Britain
    Exhibition

    Artist and Empire

    25 Nov 2015 – 10 Apr 2016

    This autumn Tate Britain presents a major exhibition of art associated with the British Empire from the 16th century to the present day.

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