
Hanif Abdurraqib

Bhanu Kapil from Ban en Banlieue (Nightboat Books, 2015)

Diana Arterian, With Lightness and Darkness and Other Brief Pieces (full text here)

Ingrid Pollard, Pastoral Interlude, 1988
Britain has traditionally been represented by an idealised rural landscape, the rolling green hills, the farm in the valley, and the sun setting over the wheat fields. The binary opposite lies within the city and its traffic, smoking chimneys, teeming hordes, that are constantly encroaching on the countryside. This work disrupts such simple common-sense notions by placing issues and British identity over these polarities. Ownership of land, commerce, economic development, and English involvement in the Atlantic slave trade are elements in this work that look at the construction of the Romantic countryside idyll. Balanced with a representation of single figures in the landscape that challenge assumptions identity and ownership. Pastoral Interlude is held in the National Collection in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

David Hammons
Higher Goals
1983

Kara Walker, African Boy Attendant Curio with Molasses and Brown Sugar, from The Marvelous Sugar Baby Installation at the old Domino Sugar Factory Warehouse, 2014.