Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 22
Helen Cammock Withdraws 40-Minute NPG Film After 50 Peers Challenge Churchill Famine Claim
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 22

Helen Cammock Withdraws 40-Minute NPG Film After 50 Peers Challenge Churchill Famine Claim

1 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 22

Summary

  • Helen Cammock removed her 40-minute video installation "Persistence" from the National Portrait Gallery on Monday after a public row over its claim that Winston Churchill was responsible for the "wilful starvation" of Indians in the 1943 Bengal famine.
  • More than 50 peers, led by Churchill biographer Lord Roberts and including Churchill's grandson Sir Nicholas Soames, signed an open letter calling that description false and an "ideologically motivated rant".
  • The gallery said the work had been presented for 10 months as an artistic response rather than a documentary and that the views in the film did not necessarily reflect the NPG's position.
  • Cammock, a Turner Prize winner, said the piece was grounded in academic debate and argued artists and institutions should resist pressure to stay "benign at best and silent at worst".
  • The dispute turns on Churchill's contested role in a famine that killed an estimated 3 million people, with critics blaming wartime policy and defenders citing a typhoon and Churchill's efforts to secure grain.

Insights

When art clashes with history, must public galleries choose between an artist's freedom and a nation's heroes?
Is an open letter from 50 peers a valid historical debate or a new form of censorship silencing inconvenient art?