Louder than words

Barbara Walker

8-31 October 2009

Barbara Walker, Time, 2009, mixed media on digital image, 41x25cm

Barbara Walker’s work addresses the personal, social and political implications of the controversial powers of the police ‘stop and search’ act. Living in Birmingham, she has witnessed at first hand a curious and potent collision of several different factors.

Birmingham has for decades been a very multicultural city, though more recent influxes have served to add layer upon layer to that multiculturalism. Birmingham is also a city in which the police have, for whatever reasons, made extensive use of their ‘stop and search’ powers. As a parent, an artist, and a life-long resident of Britain’s second city, Walker was keen to produce a new body of work that took as its starting point these disparate factors, as they impacted on the life of her son.

Barbara Walker, ‘Louder than words’, 2009, installation view

Barbara Walker, ‘Louder than words’, 2009, installation view

Barbara Walker, ‘Louder than words’, 2009, installation view

Between 2002 and 2006 and aged between 17 and 21 years old, Walker’s son Solomon was subjected to being stopped by the police on several separate occasions. On each occasion, he was asked a series of questions and searched. As now apparently required by law, at the end of the encounter he was presented by the police with a yellow A5 duplicate copy of an official form relating to the stop and search. Curious about these incidents affecting and involving her son, Walker began to collect these carbon copies. As an artist whose practice has, for some years now, sought to document the lives of Birmingham’s Black community, Walker wanted to find ways in which she could address within her artistic practice what has been happening to Solomon on the streets of his home city. The resulting work analyses the events and the almost ritualistic procedure of stop and search, posing the question: how do the police (and others) consider ‘suspicions’, and what are the consequences and the implications of these attitudes on the forming of the identity of a young Black male in British society today?


Take a video tour of the exhibition


 

Share this page

2009Paul Stone