The boy with the monkey on his back
Opera singer Peter Brathwaite takes us into the world of his extraordinary lockdown project Rediscovering #BlackPortraiture, bringing art history’s forgotten black subjects to life
Opera singer Peter Brathwaite used lockdown creatively. Responding to the Getty Museum’s social media challenge to reproduce a work of art using only household items, he embarked on an extraordinary project: to recreate as many artworks depicting black people as possible, posting the results on social media using the hashtag #BlackPortraiture. Over 80 artworks later, Peter’s remarkable recreations of art spanning eight centuries have made a huge impression, particularly in their relevance to the Black Lives Matter movement.
As part of Black History Month on ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3, Peter explores five of his recreations in depth, digging deeper into the stories of the black people he has brought to life. He also shares discoveries he has made about himself, his Barbadian heritage and ancestry, through the processes of researching and recreating each portrait.
In this second episode we meet the anonymous boy who appears in the extravagant 17th-century painting The Paston Treasure, a still life that documents a wealthy family's lavish collection of objects – including a human being.
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Rediscovering black portraiture through history
Peter Brathwaite's amazing recreations of historical artworks featuring black characters.
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How to recreate an epic artwork using household objects
Duration: 04:42
Broadcast
- Tue 13 Oct 2020 22:45´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3
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