Guernsey Press

NHS workers star in portrait exhibition

Artist Aliza Nisenbaum said she wanted to ‘pay tribute’ to key workers in the project, commissioned by the Tate Liverpool gallery.

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NHS workers from Merseyside are the stars of a new exhibition of portraits showing their lives during the pandemic.

Artist Aliza Nisenbaum said she wanted to “pay tribute” to key workers in the project, commissioned by the Tate Liverpool gallery.

The US-based artist used photographs and Zoom calls to create two group portraits and 11 paintings of individuals.

Tate Liverpool NHS worker portraits exhibition
A man looks at a painting in Tate Liverpool’s exhibition of NHS worker portraits (Peter Byrne/PA)

Nisenbaum told the PA news agency she hoped to show how the workers balanced their jobs with their home lives.

She said: “I realised how their jobs are really a vocation of service because this was something they were putting their life on the line for.

“I tried to think about how they balance life and how they deal with things like being parents.

“Some of their children would beg them not to go to work.”

She said: “I’m 63 years old and it was the thought of hanging on the wall of the Tate and having my 15 minutes of fame so I decided to just go for it! It’s been a lovely, lovely process.”

Mrs Taylor’s daughters, Claire, 44, and Joanne, 42, have also been caring for others during the pandemic, Claire in a care home and Joanne as a nurse at the Royal Liverpool Hospital.

She chose a picture of her family when asked for an object to represent something that helped emotionally.

Mrs Taylor said: “It’s nice to showcase healthcare workers, I’m a very proud nurse.”

Kevin Henderson, 53, a porter at Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, is featured in a group portrait with colleagues from the accident and emergency team who had been giving each other “team time talks” to share their experiences.

During the first wave of the pandemic the hospital had a ward of adult coronavirus patients and Mr Henderson, who has worked at Alder Hey for 13 years, had to take an adult to the mortuary for the first time.

Tate Liverpool NHS worker portraits exhibition
US-based artist Aliza Nisenbaum used photographs and Zoom calls to create the portraits (Peter Byrne/PA)

“How many people can say they are on a portrait in the Tate? It’s obviously something to tell the grandchildren once they come along.”

Prof Semple, a professor of outbreak medicine, appears in his portrait playing the bagpipes.

Nisenbaum said: “He was such a fascinating person to speak with. It was just interesting to see how many hobbies he had.”

Prof Semple said: “I’m often the person that’s bringing bad news to the public and there are many people that don’t want to hear it.

“We’ve got to persuade people that we are working for their wellbeing and that life will get better.”

– The exhibition will run at Tate Liverpool from Tuesday until June next year.

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