Claudette Elaine JohnsonMBERA (born 1959) is a British visual artist. She is known for her large-scale drawings of Black women and her involvement with the BLK Art Group, of which she was a founder member. She was described by Modern Art Oxford as "one of the most accomplished figurative artists working in Britain today".[1] A finalist for the Turner Prize in 2024, Johnson was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts the same year.[2]
Claudette Johnson was born in Manchester, UK. She studied Fine Art at Wolverhampton Polytechnic. While still a student there, she became a founder member of the BLK Art Group and took part in their second show at the Africa Centre, London, in 1983.[3] Her talk, and seminar, at the First National Black Arts Conference in 1982 is recognised as a formative moment in the Black feminist art movement in the UK.[4]
Johnson's work has featured in important group exhibitions such as Five Black Women at London's Africa Centre Gallery in 1983, Black Woman Time Now at Battersea Arts Centre in the same year, and The Thin Black Line at the ICA in London in 1986.[5] Reviewing her 1992 solo exhibition In This Skin: Drawings by Claudette Johnson, at the Black Art Gallery, London, artist Steve McQueen (at the time a student at Goldsmiths College) wrote: "What she does is to bring out the soul, sensuality, dignity, and spirituality of the black woman....Claudette Johnson's work is rooted in her African heritage. Her talent is as powerful as it is obvious."[6]
Lubaina Himid describes Johnson's work as "deeply sensuous" and "richly coloured".[7] The artist calls the Black women in her drawings "monoliths, larger than life versions of women".[7]Eddie Chambers notes: "These portraits were imposing pieces that demanded the viewer’s attention, as well as their respect."[8]
Johnson had a solo exhibition at Hollybush Gardens, London (17 November 2017 – 22 December 2017),[11] where a series of seven of her large-scale works on paper was presented, about which Frieze magazine said: "As a body of work, it possesses a profound and tender intimacy."[12]
In 2019, Johnson's first major institutional exhibition since 1990 was held at Modern Art Oxford, the show being described as "an overview of one of the most accomplished figurative artists working in Britain today....her art sets out to redress negative portrayals of black men and women and to counter the invisibility of black people in cultural spheres and beyond."[1] The reviewer for Art Fund wrote: "Intimate, powerful and sometimes deliberately uncomfortable, Claudette Johnson’s studies of black men and women demand attention and command respect."[13] According to Apollo magazine: "While Johnson asserts that blackness is a fiction created by colonialism, she insists that this fiction 'can be interrupted by an encounter with the stories that we have to tell about ourselves'. Johnson's subjects, by turns defiant and wary, funny and challenging, represent the varieties of stories that can be told by, in the artist’s words, 'Blackwoman presence.' As Johnson says, 'I’m interested in our humanity, our feelings and our politics.' Her art encapsulates all this in the tenderness and willfulness of the individual human form."[14]
Claudette Johnson: Presence at the Courtauld Gallery opened in September 2023, marking the first monographic show of Johnson's work at a major public gallery in London.[15] A critic at The Guardian praised the way Johnson "brilliantly questions depictions of non-white figures by such revered painters as Gauguin and Picasso", adding that "the quiet power of Johnson's current work leaves theory behind" and "invites a more meditative response".[16]
^McQueen, Steven (August 1992), "In This Skin: featuring Claudette Johnson", African Peoples Review, p. 5. Quoted in Eddie Chambers (2014), Black Artists in British Art: A History from 1950 to the Present, pp. 146–147.
Brooks, Frederica, "Ancestral Links: The Art of Claudette Johnson" in Sulter, Maud (ed.), Passion: Discourses on Blackwomen's Creativity (Urban Fox Press, 1990), ISBN1872124313
Himid, Lubaina (ed.), Claudette Johnson: Pushing Back the Boundaries (Rochdale Art Galleries, Rochdale, 1990)
Johnson, Claudette, "Issues Surrounding the Representation of the Naked Body of a Woman". FAN: Feminist Arts News3 (1-10): 12–14.