Britain | Public art
Britain puts up statues to commemorate black migrants
Two commissions, two very different artistic approaches
As the passenger ship Empire Windrush chugged towards Britain in 1948, carrying hundreds of Jamaicans, the government shuddered. “This unorganised rush is a disaster. We knew nothing about it,” an official told the Daily Herald newspaper. Another warned that “it will be difficult, if not impossible” for the new arrivals to find jobs.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Heavy metal”
Britain June 25th 2022
- Britain is a great place to start a company, but a bad one to scale it up
- Britain puts up statues to commemorate black migrants
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- Leaving Horizon would jeopardise research in Britain and the EU
- The challenge of coastal erosion in Britain
- Inside Britain’s national culture collections
- The case for a softer Brexit is clear. How to get one is not
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