Mark Sealy
Mark Sealy MBE (born 1960) is a British curator and cultural historian with a special interest in the relationship of photography to social change, identity politics and human rights.[1] In 1991 he became the director of Autograph ABP, the Association of Black Photographers,[2][3] based since 2007 at Rivington Place, a purpose-built international visual arts centre in Shoreditch, London. He has curated several major international exhibitions and is also a lecturer.
Biography
Born in Hackney, London (to a father from Barbados and an English mother)[4] and raised in Newcastle,[5] Mark Sealy studied at Goldsmiths, University of London, after which he worked on national newspapers in Fleet Street.[6]
As the Director of Autograph ABP (the Association of Black Photographers) since 1991, he has been responsible for initiating and delivering many exhibitions, residency projects and publications, as well as commissioning photographers and filmmakers.[1] A recent commissioned project (2013–14) was The Unfinished Conversation, by award-winning documentary-maker John Akomfrah, a film-work on the political life of Stuart Hall.[7]
Sealy has been a guest lecturer at the Royal College of Art and many other institutions in England and abroad,[8][9] and has participated in many national and international conferences, including on the "Historical Perspectives on International Curatorial Debates of the 1980s and 1990s" panel at the Shades of Black conference, Duke University (Durham, North Carolina), in April 2001,[10] the 2011 symposium on "post-racial imaginaries" held at the University of Westminster by the journal darkmatter,[11] "Reframing the Moment: Legacies of the 1982 Blk Art Group" (curated by Sonia Boyce and Keith Piper) in 2012 at Wolverhampton Polytechnic,[12] and has been on judging juries for such prestigious awards as the World Press Photo competition.[6]
In 2007, the Royal Photographic Society awarded Sealy the Hood Medal for services to photography.[13] In the 2013 New Year Honours list he was awarded an MBE for services to photography.[14][15]
His work as a curator includes an audiovisual programme for Rencontres d'Arles in 1993, and Human Rights Human Wrongs — an exhibition featuring images selected from the Black Star collection of 20th-century photojournalism[4] — at the Ryerson Image Centre, Toronto (23 January–14 April 2013),[1] and at the Photographers' Gallery, London (6 February–6 April 2015).[16] Among many initiatives at Rivington Place, he co-curated with Renée Mussai (archivist and head of research at Autograph) the critically acclaimed Black Chronicles II, first shown in 2014,[17] a solo retrospective of the work of Rotimi Fani-Kayode (1955–1989) marking the 25th anniversary of his death,[18] and most recently researched and curated an exhibition (16 July–12 September 2015) to mark the 70th anniversary of the Fifth Pan-African Congress in 1945, featuring photographs by John Deakin exhibited for the first time.[19][20]
Sealy is currently a PhD candidate at Durham University, focusing his research on photography and cultural violence.
Publications
Sealy is the editor of a 1993 book on the Black British photographer Vanley Burke,[21] collaborated with Stuart Hall on Different, an examination of identity through photography,[22] and has co-edited other significant texts published by Autograph,[13] such as the 1996 volume Rotimi Fani-Kayode & Alex Hirst Photographs.[23]
References
- 1 2 3 "Human Rights Human Wrongs", Ryerson Image Centre.
- ↑ "Who We Are", Autograph ABP.
- ↑ Mark Sealy biography, Africultures.
- 1 2 Martin Knelman, "Human Rights, Human Wrongs at Ryerson Image Centre", Toronto Star, 25 January 2013.
- ↑ Tom Seymour, "Human Rights Human Wrongs", British Journal of Photography, 18 February 2015.
- 1 2 Alison Donnell, "Mark Sealy", Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture, Routledge, 2002, p. 274.
- ↑ "John Akomfrah: The Unfinished Conversation" at Autograph.
- ↑ "Talk: 'The Historical Conditions of Existence – Mark Sealy MBE on Stuart Hall and the Photographic Moment'", Weltkulturen Museum / Weltkulturen Labor, Frankfurt a. M., Germany. C&, 5 June 2014.
- ↑ "Art & Compromise (III) — Mark Sealy: The Organ that Weeps", Beaconsfield in collaboration with City & Guilds of London Art School.
- ↑ "Mark Sealy MBE", Diaspora Artists.
- ↑ "Westminster hosts darkmatter symposium", University of Westminster, 16 May 2011.
- ↑ "Reframing the Moment: Legacies of the 1982 Blk Art Group", October 2012.
- 1 2 Mark Sealy biography, Autograph ABP.
- ↑ "Mark Sealy awarded MBE for services to Photography", School of Modern Languages & Cultures, Durham University, 21 January 2013.
- ↑ "New Year Honours 2013: full list of recipients", The Telegraph, 29 December 2012.
- ↑ "Human Rights Human Wrongs", The Photographers' Gallery.
- ↑ Charlotte Runcie, "Black Chronicles II, Rivington Place, Review: 'powerful'. A tantalising new exhibition seeks to redress the absence of black people from the history of photography", The Telegraph, 18 September 2014.
- ↑ "Rotimi Fani-Kayode (1955–1989)", Autograph.
- ↑ "The Fifth Pan-African Congress", Autograph ABP.
- ↑ Brennavan Sritharan, "The Manchester town hall meeting that shaped Africa: remembering the Fifth Pan-African Congress", The British Journal of Photigraphy, 27 July 2015.
- ↑ Mark Sealy (Editor), Stuart Hall (Preface), Vanley Burke: A Retrospective (Lawrence & Wishart, 1993), Amazon.
- ↑ ABP, Mark Sealy, Stuart Hall, Different: A Historical Context: Contemporary Photographers and Black Identity, Phaidon Press, 2001.
- ↑ Rotimi Fani-Kayode & Alex Hirst — Photographs at Autograph Shop.
External links
- "Afterimage: why representation matters - Mark Sealy", YouTube.
- "Mark Sealy Interview: HUMAN RIGHTS HUMAN WRONGS", Vimeo. Interview by Janice McLaren, Head of Education and Projects at The Photographers' Gallery.
- "'The Historical Conditions of Existence: on Stuart Hall and the Photographic Moment' Mark Sealy, OBE". Vimeo.