The Caribbean Artists Movement
The Caribbean Artists Movement (CAM) was an influential cultural initiative, begun in London, England, in 1966 and active until about 1972,[1] that focused on the works being produced by Caribbean writers, visual artists, poets, dramatists, film makers, actors and musicians. The key people involved in setting up CAM were Edward Kamau Brathwaite, John La Rose and Andrew Salkey.[2][3] As Angela Cobbinah has written, "the movement had an enormous impact on Caribbean arts in Britain. In its intense five-year existence it set the dominant artistic trends, at the same time forging a bridge between West Indian migrants and those who came to be known as black Britons."[4]
History
In 1968, Brathwaite wrote about CAM's origins, dating them back to a small informal meeting held on 19 December 1966 in his London flat in Mecklenburgh Square[5] (although Louis James suggests that the "seed ideas of what was to become CAM were germinating in Brathwaite's activities at Mona in the previous decade"):[6]
"What was to become the Caribbean Artists Movement (CAM) started in December 1966 in my Bloomsbury basement flat. I had recently arrived from the Caribbean on study leave to Britain, and as a writer myself, wanted, quite naturally, to get in touch with as many Caribbean artists as possible. But where were they? The novelists’ books were being regularly published; at the Commonwealth Arts Festival I had seen work by a few painters, designers and sculptors from the Caribbean; but no one seemed to know how to get in touch with them. In addition it seemed to me that our West Indian artists were not participating significantly in the cultural life of the country that had become their home.
Since 1950, nearly every West Indian novelist worth the name had come to London and more than a hundred books had come from their typewriters and pens. But despite this, the British public didn’t seem to be very much aware of the nature and value of this contribution.
...This situation, it seemed to me, was something to be deplored. The isolation of West Indian writers from each other and from the society in which they lived could eventually only stultify development and could do nothing to contribute to perhaps the most important problem of our times – the problem of the future of race relations in Britain."[7]
The BBC programme Caribbean Voices, to which Brathwaite was also a contributor, is considered a precursor of CAM.[1]
The journal Savacou was started as a platform for CAM, connecting its activities in Britain, the Caribbean region and the African diaspora, and elsewhere internationally. La Rose began selling and publishing books, under the name New Beacon Books, because of the demand for material that was stimulated by the formation of CAM.
Other notable artists and intellectuals associated with CAM include C. L. R. James, Stuart Hall, Wilson Harris, Kenneth Ramchand, Ronald Moody, Aubrey Williams, Gordon Rohlehr, Christopher Laird, Louis James, Orlando Patterson, Ivan Van Sertima, Althea McNish, Donald Hinds, James Berry, Errol Lloyd and Anne Walmsley. Linton Kwesi Johnson is among a younger generation of Caribbean writers to have been inspired by CAM during the early '70s.[8][9] Walmsley has written a comprehensive appraisal of the movement in The Caribbean Artists Movement, 1966-1972: A Literary and Cultural History (1992), published by New Beacon Books.
CAM is acknowledged as being particularly significant in helping to "spark interest in the work of Britain's artists of color".[10] The first CAM conference was held in 1967 in London,[11] and a subsequent conference at the University of Kent in 1969.[5]
References
- 1 2 "Caribbean Artists Movement", in Richard M. Juang and Noelle Morrissette (eds), Africa and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History, Vol. 1, ABC-CLIO, 2008, pp. 234-35.
- ↑ "John La Rose", GPI website.
- ↑ Kathleen Ho, "The Caribbean Artists Movement (CAM) and the Trinidad February Revolution of 1970", Northwestern University.
- ↑ Angela Cobbinah, "A Caribbean hothouse for the arts in a cold climate", Camden New Journal Review, 25 October 2007.
- 1 2 Louis James, "The Caribbean Artists Movement", in Bill Schwarz, West Indian Intellectuals in Britain, Manchester University Press, 2003, p. 209.
- ↑ James (2003), "The Caribbean Artists Movement", p. 211.
- ↑ Edward Brathwaite, "The Caribbean Artists Movement", in Caribbean Quarterly, Vol. 14, No. 1/2, A Survey of the Arts (March - June 1968), pp. 57-59.
- ↑ "Linton Kwesi Johnson’s Dub Poetry and the Political Aesthetics of Carnival in Britain".
- ↑ Sandra Courtman, "Caribbean Artists' Movement", in Alison Donnell (ed.), Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture, Routledge, 2002, p. 64–65.
- ↑ Mora J. Beauchamp-Byrd, "Caribbean Artists in Britain, 1966-1996". Curator's essay for Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain, 1966-1996, March 1998.
- ↑ D. A. Dunkley, Readings in Caribbean History and Culture: Breaking Ground, Lexington Books, 2011, note 55, p. 252.
Further reading
- Anne Walmsley, The Caribbean Artists Movement, 1966-1972: A Literary and Cultural History, New Beacon Books, 1992. ISBN 978-1873201060
- Anne Walmsley, "A Sense of Community: Kamau Brathwaite and the Caribbean Artists Movement", in Stewart Brown (ed.), The Art of Kamau Brathwaite, Bridgend, UK: Seren, 1995. ISBN 978-1854111272
- Louis James, "The Caribbean Artists Movement", Chapter 10 in Bill Schwarz, West Indian Intellectuals in Britain, Manchester University Press, 2003, pp. 209–227. ISBN 978-0719064753
- Brian Alleyne, Radicals Against Race: Black Activism and Cultural Politics, Berg, 2002.
External links
- "The Visual Artists of the Caribbean Artists Movement: 1966-1972".
- George Padmore Institute website.
- Angela Cobbinah, "Caribbean Artists Movement Retrospective", 25 October 2007.