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Hew Locke in the heart of Tate Britain

The Guyanese-British artist creates his largest work to date.

Every year Tate Britain invites an artist to create an exciting new commission for the grand spaces of the Duveen Galleries at the heart of the building. This year the commission will be by internationally renowned Guyanese-British artist Hew Locke. He鈥檚 been making work for over thirty years, and the 90-metre space with its unique neo-classical architecture is his most ambitious project to date. In 1966, just before Independence, Hew moved to Guyana with his parents, where he spent most of his childhood. This is key to his story as an artist, as icons, myths and individuals that come to represent a country鈥檚 notion of nationhood have always fascinated him. Poetic, political and theatrical, Hew鈥檚 sculptures are assembled from materials and sources that reference global histories and the symbols of our age; from coats-of-arms, trophies and weapons to plastic toys, boats and flowers. His work explores the languages of colonial and post-colonial power, questioning ideas of global cultural identities and how these representations are altered by the passage of time. Steeped in history, the artwork is painstakingly researched with the help of Hew鈥檚 wife, curator Indra Khanna. Felicity Finch joins them in their London studio as the new commission starts to take shape and at Tate Britain for the installation.

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29 minutes