Design unveiled for London’s memorial to the victims of transatlantic slavery
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00:00I started working with cowrie shells at the International Slavery Museum and I was aware
00:04of them being used as a currency throughout the world in West Africa but at the museum
00:09through my research I learned that they were actually also used to purchase people.
00:15So from there I started upscaling them and thinking about how to take this kind of small
00:19menial object and actually bring to fore the weight of it. It offers an opportunity for
00:25community to engage and also have conversations around slavery which I think needs to happen
00:32especially after the last few weeks. I think what was so important about what Kayla has done
00:37is that he's managed to balance the very difficult challenging aspects of slavery so the brutality,
00:45pain, grief, exploitation and he's balanced that with strength and with resilience
00:54and it's quite important for us to try to have something which enables that balance to be
00:59arrived at because we know that it's a very difficult subject, it's quite traumatic for
01:05communities of colour particularly for black communities and we wanted something which
01:09enabled us to be able to connect with the issue but also acknowledge the importance of resistance,
01:16the importance of including the voices of the enslaved in the process.