New exhibition to celebrate South Asian communities

A black and white photograph of an anti-racism demonstration in Coventry.Image source, Virk Collection
Image caption,

The exhibition will open at the Herbert Art Gallery & Museum on 14 November

  • Published

A new exhibition celebrating the heritage of South Asian communities in Coventry is to open later this year after receiving funding.

Stories That Made Us: Roots, Resilience, Representation, will open at the Herbert Art Gallery & Museum on 14 November.

Culture Coventry Trust announced on Wednesday it had received a £131,350 grant from The National Lottery Heritage Fund to support the project.

Marguerite Nugent, the trust's cultural director, said they could bring stories from the city's South Asian communities to life in a way that acknowledged the "deep cultural impact" they had made.

A black and white photograph of a family in Punjab, India.Image source, Stories that Made Us Archive
Image caption,

The exhibition will portray the lived experiences of a South Asian family in Coventry from 1968 to 2010

"It's about building bridges between communities and we hope this will lead to a deeper understanding of our shared history," Ms Nugent added.

According to the 2021 census, about 18.5%, external of Coventry's population identified as Asian or Asian British, but Herbert said they were "often underrepresented" in public collections or exhibitions.

The exhibition will portray the lived experiences of a South Asian family in the city from 1968 to 2010, drawing on Coventry Archives' Virk Collection and Hardish Virk's Stories That Made Us Collection.

It will include photographs, books, magazines, vinyl records and other memorabilia.

A woman wearing headphones sits in front of a microphone at a radio desk in the 1990s.Image source, Stories that Made Us Archive
Image caption,

About 18.5% of the Coventry's population identified as Asian or Asian British in the 2021 census

Hardish Virk, exhibition co-curator, said it aimed to tell stories of both migrant and British South Asian communities, through the lived experience of one family.

"This exhibition doesn't claim to tell every story, instead it will tackle themes of migration, activism and identity which will resonate with both South Asian communities as well as wider society," Mr Virk added.

"Part of the legacy is to celebrate and document the positive contribution South Asian communities have and continue to make to every aspect of British society."

Get in touch

Tell us which stories we should cover in Warwickshire

Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, external, X, external and Instagram, external.

Related topics