the new exhibition at london's taped person is celebrating caribbean british art. life between island celebrates the cultural change that came when more than half a 1000000 people move to the u. k. from the caribbean, between 947 and 970 integration started after world war 2, when workers were needed to help rebuild prison. jessica bolton went to take a look. i 7 decades of art with a connection to the caribbean life between islands that tape britain is the 1st time a british museum with an international reputation is showcasing caribbean british are these are the, the history is recent history is we need to mind and we need to show that significance to today, and we need to show how they've continued through autistic practices through today . to walk through that history from the 1st artist arriving in the late 19 forties . artists exploring the dynamics of living between 2 cultures. she ain't holding them up. she's holding on looks at the strength, often expected of black women and points to the difficulties of maintaining her heritage while forging one's own identity. the black power movement of the sixties and seventies, documented by photographers calling out racism and discrimi