Donald Locke

Dageraad From the Air

1978–9

Artist
Donald Locke 1930–2010
Medium
Acrylic paint, canvas, metal and steel on canvas
Dimensions
Support: 1172 × 1655 mm
Collection
Tate
Acquisition
Purchased with funds provided by The Joe and Marie Donnelly Acquisition Fund 2021
Reference
T15769

Display caption

This work is titled after the Guyana sugar plantation Dageraad. In 1763 it was the site of Guyana’s first rebellion of enslaved people. Locke addressed the themes of plantations in works from 1972–9 and he considered them some of his most important. They function as visual metaphors for the corrosive plantation system of labour that shaped the history of the artist’s native Guyana under Dutch and later British colonial rule. The abstract minimalism of this painting reflects the brutal uniformity of colonial rule and slavery, which reduced people and land to expendable commodities.

Gallery label, January 2022

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