For the past thirty years, Guyanese-British artist Hew Locke (b. 1959) has used strategies of appropriation to reveal and upend the visual codes of imperialism. Incorporating multiple media, including sculpture, photography, drawing, and found objects, Locke’s oeuvre has been described as a “postcolonial baroque” that deconstructs and reimagines deeply entrenched iconographies of British sovereignty. His rich, dense, highly textured, and multilayered attention to materiality fuses vernacular and formal traditions influenced by his British and Guyanese heritage.
Spanning his career from the late 1990s to the present, this exhibition showcases the full spectrum of Locke’s practice. It brings together distinct bodies of work that examine the historical processes of colonialism through the present-day legacies of global market capitalism, migration, and diaspora. Key themes include public statuary, portraiture, ships, boats, and architecture, expressed through Locke’s constantly evolving use of materials and their associated status and meanings.
Born in 1959 in Edinburgh, Scotland, Locke moved with his family to Georgetown, Guyana, in 1966—in time to witness the colony declare its independence from Britain. Locke returned to Britain in 1980 and emerged as an artist during the highly politicized environment of Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government. He received a BA in fine art from Falmouth School of Art in 1988, and an MA in sculpture from the Royal College of Art, London, in 1994. He lives and works in London.
Hew Locke
Koh-i-noor, 2005
mixed media on wood base
116 x 86 x 25 ins.
294.6 x 218.4 x 63.5 cm
Hew Locke
Serpent of the Nile (Sejant), 2007
chromogenic print
91 1/8 x 71 1/2 ins.
231.5 x 181.6 cm
Hew Locke
Ambassador 4, 2022
mixed media, including resin, metal MDF, fabric, and plastic
80 11/16 × 28 3/8 × 77 9/16 ins
205 × 72 × 197 cm.
Hew Locke
Koh-i-noor, 2005
mixed media on wood base
116 x 86 x 25 ins.
294.6 x 218.4 x 63.5 cm
Hew Locke
Serpent of the Nile (Sejant), 2007
chromogenic print
91 1/8 x 71 1/2 ins.
231.5 x 181.6 cm
Hew Locke
Ambassador 4, 2022
mixed media, including resin, metal MDF, fabric, and plastic
80 11/16 × 28 3/8 × 77 9/16 ins
205 × 72 × 197 cm.
Locke is known for making art that deals incisively and repetitively with the legacies of empire, with its symbols of political, social, legal, and economic power.
This year, we read too many incredible books to count — here are a few that stuck with us, including tomes on Marsha P. Johnson, Mary Cassatt in Paris, and Ruth Asawa and mothering.
Long in the planning, this significant publication will enlighten you about Hew Locke’s massive repertoire and the beating heart that guides it.
The future may look no better than the complicated, violent past that Locke explores. But, like it or not, into the future we all sail together.
The London-based artist let CULTURED in on his studio habits and what he wants most for himself as the Yale Center for British Art opens his most comprehensive show to date.
On the eve of a major US survey, the artist talks to Apollo about decorating statues and the ornamental side of the British Empire.
