Editorial archives & illustrations

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RM
[EMBARGOED UNTIL 5PM BST, 21 AUGUST 2024] London, UK.  21 August 2024.  London-based, British-Nigerian mixed media artist Caroline Chinakwe with ‘His Lived Experience’, one of her two new commissioned works unveiled in the Sugar & Slavery gallery of the London Museum Docklands as the first major additions to the gallery’s permanent displays since it opened in 2007.  The two large scale, 1 x 1 metre portraits reflect the stories, challenges and experiences of London’s African and Caribbean diaspora and what it means to be Black in Britain today. Credit: Stephen Chung / Alamy Live News-stock-photo
RM
[EMBARGOED UNTIL 5PM BST, 21 AUGUST 2024] London, UK.  21 August 2024.  London-based, British-Nigerian mixed media artist Caroline Chinakwe with ‘His Lived Experience’, one of her two new commissioned works unveiled in the Sugar & Slavery gallery of the London Museum Docklands as the first major additions to the gallery’s permanent displays since it opened in 2007.  The two large scale, 1 x 1 metre portraits reflect the stories, challenges and experiences of London’s African and Caribbean diaspora and what it means to be Black in Britain today. Credit: Stephen Chung / Alamy Live News-stock-photo
RM
[EMBARGOED UNTIL 5PM BST, 21 AUGUST 2024] London, UK.  21 August 2024.  London-based, British-Nigerian mixed media artist Caroline Chinakwe with ‘His Lived Experience’, one of her two new commissioned works unveiled in the Sugar & Slavery gallery of the London Museum Docklands as the first major additions to the gallery’s permanent displays since it opened in 2007.  The two large scale, 1 x 1 metre portraits reflect the stories, challenges and experiences of London’s African and Caribbean diaspora and what it means to be Black in Britain today. Credit: Stephen Chung / Alamy Live News-stock-photo
RM
[EMBARGOED UNTIL 5PM BST, 21 AUGUST 2024] London, UK.  21 August 2024.  London-based, British-Nigerian mixed media artist Caroline Chinakwe with ‘His Lived Experience’, one of her two new commissioned works unveiled in the Sugar & Slavery gallery of the London Museum Docklands as the first major additions to the gallery’s permanent displays since it opened in 2007.  The two large scale, 1 x 1 metre portraits reflect the stories, challenges and experiences of London’s African and Caribbean diaspora and what it means to be Black in Britain today. Credit: Stephen Chung / Alamy Live News-stock-photo
RM
[EMBARGOED UNTIL 5PM BST, 21 AUGUST 2024] London, UK.  21 August 2024.  London-based, British-Nigerian mixed media artist Caroline Chinakwe with ‘His Lived Experience’, one of her two new commissioned works unveiled in the Sugar & Slavery gallery of the London Museum Docklands as the first major additions to the gallery’s permanent displays since it opened in 2007.  The two large scale, 1 x 1 metre portraits reflect the stories, challenges and experiences of London’s African and Caribbean diaspora and what it means to be Black in Britain today. Credit: Stephen Chung / Alamy Live News-stock-photo
RM
[EMBARGOED UNTIL 5PM BST, 21 AUGUST 2024] London, UK.  21 August 2024.  London-based, British-Nigerian mixed media artist Caroline Chinakwe with (R) ‘His Lived Experience’, one of her two new commissioned works unveiled in the Sugar & Slavery gallery of the London Museum Docklands as the first major additions to the gallery’s permanent displays since it opened in 2007.  The two large scale, 1 x 1 metre portraits reflect the stories, challenges and experiences of London’s African and Caribbean diaspora and what it means to be Black in Britain today. Credit: Stephen Chung / Alamy Live News-stock-photo