BBC Interview - Coe Gallery

BBC Interview - Coe Gallery

Posted by Jasmine Coe on

Bristol Coe Gallery is UK's first Aboriginal-owned art gallery
By Jasmine Ketibuah-Foley
Broadcast Journalist
Published
Jasmine CoeIMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE COE
Image caption,
Jasmine Coe said art helps her learn about the history of her culture

An artist inspired by her Aboriginal father is opening a pop-up gallery to reconnect with her roots and create a safe space for indigenous artists.

Wiradjuri-British artist Jasmine Coe, from Bristol, started making Aboriginal art after reconnecting with her activist father Paul Coe in 2016.

She said his history and the art and culture of Aboriginal people had helped her to accept her identity.

Coe Gallery will be the UK's first indigenous owned Aboriginal gallery.

Jasmine Coe (right) and her fatherIMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE COE
Image caption,
Miss Coe said reconnecting with her father Paul had been inspirational

"Activism runs through my father's family, my art becomes a place where I can learn about the history of my culture and what my family have stood for," Miss Coe said.

Paul Coe has been involved in Aboriginal justice campaigns and the Aboriginal Land Rights movement since the 70s.

Paul CoeIMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE COE
Image caption,
Miss Coe reconnected with her father after 20 years of separation
Paul Coe in DoverIMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE COE
Image caption,
In 1976 Mr Coe travelled to Dover Beach to plant the Aboriginal flag and ‘claim’ England as Aboriginal land

"The process of painting allows me to confront certain challenges I feel from having a mixed heritage - Aboriginal and British," Miss Coe added.

"The history of these two cultures is traumatic and at times left me feeling like two people clashing within one existence."

Jasmine CoeIMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE COE
Image caption,
Miss Coe said she wants Bristol to know more about the Aboriginal experience
Jasmine CoeIMAGE SOURCE,JASMINE COE
Image caption,
Jasmine Coe has been painting Aboriginal art since 2016

She said it was important to open the gallery in Bristol because of its connection to colonialism in Australia.

"During the 1800s the SS Great Britain brought more than 15,000 people from Liverpool to Melbourne," she said.

"Bristol is a city that has its own traumatic colonial history where the historical narrative is now being shifted.

"I believe there is space for the Indigenous experience to be heard and to share in how colonialism continues to affect Indigenous communities across the world."

Sandon Gibbs - O'NeillIMAGE SOURCE,@BURRUGUU_ART
Image caption,
Mr Gibbs-O'Neill will show his work at the Coe Gallery pop-up

Aboriginal artist from Australia, Sandon Gibbs-O'Neill will show some of his art at Coe Gallery.

He said the new art space would demonstrate that Aboriginal communities are "not just surviving, we're actually thriving".

"I can only name a few Aboriginal art galleries here in Australia," he said.

Sandon Gibbs -O'NeillIMAGE SOURCE,@BURRUGUU_ART
Image caption,
Mr Gibbs-O'Neill said he thought Miss Coe's gallery would be a "safe space" that supported Aboriginal artists

"I'm not sure any of them are even indigenous owned, so it's pretty special to have an indigenous-owned Aboriginal art gallery in Bristol.

"It's important for us to have control over our own narrative."

The first pop-up exhibition is expected to go ahead in the summer with the support of Bridging Histories and University of Bristol, until a permanent space has been found.

Presentational grey line

Follow BBC West on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to: bristol@bbc.co.uk

← Older Post Newer Post →