Black Arts & Culture Feature:
- Reclaims European and American landscape traditions, creating singular atmospheric scenes; Hurvin Anderson is among his generation's most important painters.
- Born to Windrush-generation parents, Hurvin Anderson's Jamaican roots and English upbringing shape works addressing racism and colonial legacies.
- Dual belonging, being in one place but thinking about another, explores memory, time slips, and colonial afterlives through photography-based painting.
- Barbershop scenes show psychological sanctuary for Black communities; grids and gates symbolize segregation, contrasting Caribbean color with British winter greys.
The Exhibition
The Hurvin Anderson exhibition currently running at Tate Britain is divided into six areas, each exploring a different setting or time, in both personal, national, and international history. On view, you will find 80 canvases covering 30 years of work. Throughout his career, Anderson has been creating atmospheric landscapes and interior scenes.
Landscape Traditions
Anderson has an educated and thoughtful understanding of the long traditions of European and American landscape painting. But his works powerfully delve into the lived experiences of contemporary Britain. Original and visually rich, there really is no one else currently creating such astonishing works. When we realize that he is probably one of the most important painters of his generation, why isn’t he a household name? Louder for the art world gatekeepers at the back!
Welcome
With a complicated, double-sided heritage, Anderson, born in 1965, has Jamaican roots and an English upbringing. His parents were part of the Windrush generation. In 1948, Britain invited any of its Commonwealth citizens to migrate and settle in the UK, to assist with labor shortages. On arrival, they were exposed to brutal racism and prejudice, and this historical event is still an unresolved and problematic legacy. Hurvin was the youngest child of the family, born in Birmingham.
Two Worlds
His childhood was spent sketching superheroes and exploring photography with an older brother. His first paintings were taken from early family photographs, and he continues to work from his own photographic record. The urge to paint his experience as a Black man of Caribbean heritage, belonging to two places, led him to art school. He describes this as “being in one place but thinking about another.” And of course, those reflections lead us to the socio-cultural effects of colonialism, and the bloody remnants of slavery. This is where experience, memory, and our collective history collide.
Is It OK to Be Black?
Psychology is one of Anderson’s interests, and this is obvious in the barbershop paintings. At first glance, these seem like friendly, social spaces, familiar to anyone who has walked down a British high street. But of course, given the overt prejudice faced by Black families, barbershops were much more than a place to get a haircut. They were a much-needed sanctuary and a vital cultural haven, where your skin and your hair were not just understood but loved and cared for.
Perception vs Reality
Many canvases are full of Caribbean color, with greens and blues of lush, tropical foliage. At times, these seem almost abstract, with a sense of an image dissolving. Others show the twilight greys of a British winter sky, a thousand miles away. In some, we see a repeating theme of grids, grills, and gates, superimposed before us, blocking or obscuring our view of the scene. This is an unsettling vision Anderson personally met on visiting the Caribbean, where he found security barriers dividing rich and poor, tourist and resident. A bitter after-taste of colonial segregation.
Time Slips
Slipping through his own personal time and space, looping backwards and forwards, Anderson gives us a glimpse into the reality of Black British life, brutal at times, yet beautiful too. Accompanying the canvases is a video of the social and political upheaval faced over decades by Black Britons.
Take a Look
London always has more than its fair share of places to engage with art. And lots of busy, big name exhibitions too. But if you are anywhere near Tate Britain before August 23, 2026, do head to the Hurvin Anderson exhibition. You can thank me later! For a tantalizing glimpse at the works, check out this short video by Tate.
Hurvin Anderson is on view at Tate Britain until August 23, 2026.
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