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Tag: Exhibitions

Come Dine in Blue

COME DINE IN BLUE

Inspired by the work of Tisna Westerhof.  

Created and produced by artist Tisna Westerhof & Cristiana Bottigella. 

Participatory art project bringing together more than 100 Lewisham residents with a migrant background creating a Blue-and-White dining room installation that tells personal and collective stories of identity and belonging, redefining heritage, celebrating different cultures and the journey to Lewisham.

Please read more about Come Dine in Blue project: An article by Miri de Villers for Eastlononlines and an interview by Ayokunle Oluwalana, community reporter for My London News.

Please visit our Come Dine in Blue Shop.

‘Blue Borough’ – Illustration by Tisna Westerhof
Buy it here 

Supported by





‘Redefining heritage’ – Illustration by Tisna Westerhof

Artists and art facilitators: Tisna Westerhof, Amanda Holiday, Rain Wu, Clive Burton, Nadina Ali, Kai Christodulou-lee, Mary McInerney, Carla Thomas, Tang Victoria Hoi Yi, Amelia Yang and WhittyGordon Projects.

Participants:
Ainhoa Oleas, Al S. Family, Alan Chong, Alex & Lavinia Bajko, Anaya Hyde, Angeline Espinosa, April Lam, Asmahan, Aylin, Bella Alexandrova, Bernard, Biheri, Channan Warmington Lewis Moore, Dana, Deborah Thomas, Dulce, Edward, Elisabeth Grace Enriquez, Fabiola Jimenez, Fanyi Zhang, Farozan Saleemi, Farhnaz Saleemi, Faten, Fr. Grant Bolton-Debbage, Fiona Quadri, Flynn Richards, Fox Thomas Butler, Franklin Jackduring, Fransesca Telling, Freya Ye, Georgiana Hyde, Gustavo Barboza, Hanadi, Lloyd Richards, Hang Luc, Harris family, Iyamide Thomas, Jada Perry, James Attwood, Jane Dolores, Jessenia Parrez, Jinying Gao, Joshua, Julia and Jim Wells, Julia, Julia Deng, Julia Scoble, Kai Christodulou-lee, Ke Bao, Kiki Wong, Kyrah Warmington-Lewis, Leyre, Lia Ayuino, Lilyana Karavacheva, Limah, Linda, Lueillia Joseph, Luisa Chicaiza y Salvador Herrera, Maliha, Marianela, Marie Wotay Kamara, Marilyn Alfaro, Martha, Mary Shephard, Mateo Espinoza, Melvasquez, Mia Olaya, Mia Scoble, Mong Lang, Mutiat Oyesile, Nadina Ali, Naiala, Najm, Nicolas Saez, Petia Pakozdi, Pokuaa, Qianhui Sun – Alice, Quan Cao, Randolph Andy, Remmie Akibo-Betts, Rihanna Daño Cali, Ruby Seasy, Sabah, Sachi Slate, Sally Shao, Sanaya Havaldar, Sena Appeah, Serafina Min, Shoko Sakuma, Silvia, Sweeta jan, Tania Patiño Ariana Ruiz, Tolu Elusadé, Tom V., Vaura & Noah Viner, Veronica Ashley, Violeta Luna Enriquez, Waeed, Wiliam, Wagma, Woman from Syria living in Lewisham with her family, Xuemei Hwang, Yalda, Yen Trieu, Yiyun Li, Zainab, Zhuoyuan Zhang, Zoila y Luis Lema. 

Part of We Are Lewisham, Lewisham London Borough of Culture 2022

Exhibition opening:
Saturday 24th of September, 3-7pm         
Exhibition open, Sunday 25th – Thursday 6th of October. Weekdays, 3-7pm, Saturday & Sunday, 2-6pm.

Programme of the opening day:
Launch of the Come Dine in Blue film created by WhittyGordon Project and the Come Dine in Blue publication.
Free creative family workshops available throughout the opening day.
Food and drinks made by the participating community groups.
Come Dine in Blue artworks, publication and gadgets available to purchase.

Partner community organisations:
Refugee Council – Lewisham 
Migration Museum 
The Confucius Institute at Goldsmiths, University of London
JOY & The Tai-Chi community at All Saints Community Centre
All Saints Church, New Cross
Be Seen Be Heard Youth Forum – Young black artists in Lewisham/SE London aged 16-25
The Latin-American community of Lewisham & SE London
The community of La Placita Mall 

Funded by:
The Arts Council England
The Heritage Fund 
Lewisham Council


The programme of 30 creative workshops was led by artist Tisna Westerhof and curated by Cristiana Bottigella, in collaboration with South East London based artists and art facilitators: Amanda Holiday, Rain Wu, Mary McInerney and Carla Thomas. The 100 participants engaged in various craft-based activities and learned new creative skills whilst sharing their personal and collective stories and memories of family rituals around food, domestic and national celebrations as well as the challenges of migration and building their home in a new country. The creative workshops varied from creating clay pots, decorating vintage crockery using onglaze enamels and decal transfers, embroidering and textile screen printing, spoken word and collaging extra-large cut outs, quilting, decorating tiles and kiln firing. All the artworks made during the workshops are featured in the Come Dine in Blue Exhibition. The gallery is divided in a dining room and a kitchen presenting The Table of Be-Longing, Two-Towels, The Story Tile of Joy, Messages to Blue, The Women’s Quilt of Pride, The Wish Dish Collection, Lewisham Toile and The Melting Pots.

Originated in China, the Blue-and-White ceramic technique has travelled the world. From Dutch Delftware to Portuguese Azulejos, from the Italian Maiolica to the English Willow Patterns and the tin-glazed earthenware from the British Isles. Often intended for the Middle Eastern market, the Blue-and-White ceramic was exported to Japan, Korea, South East Asia, Europe and as far as Africa and South America. The Blue-and-White is the unifying language through which the Come Dine in Blue participants tell their personal stories and recollect their memories, domestic traditions and ancestral words of wisdom.

Come Dine in Blue publication:
Buy it here
Editor: Frederica Agbah;  
Design: Matteo Grotto (OpenEDU);
Contributors: Massimiliano Mollona, Amanda Holiday, Rachel Kanev & Chenjin Ying (Confucius Institute), Fr. Grant Bolton-Debbage, Jada Perry & Fiona Quadri (Be Seen Be Heard Youth Forum), Shoko Sakuma, Alice Qianhui Sun, Amelia Yang, Tang Victoria Hoi Yi, Fabiola Jimenez.
Supported by The Heritage Fund

Special Thanks to:
Frederica Agbah, Bella Alexandrova, Massimiliano Mollona, Amanda Holiday, Father Grant Bolton-Debbage, Mia-Violet Leech, Liberty Melly, Eve Maia Annesley, Lois Nutt, Jane Keane, Yen Trieu, Mong Lang, Rachel Kanev, Jada Perry, Francesco Strocchi and Matteo Grotto, Renie Westerhof-Pot, Sigrun Sverrisdottir, Rachel Lonsdale, Max Melvin and the Refugee Cafe.

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Exhibitions, Participatory, Shop, Workshop

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WUNDERTÜTE Exhibition opening Thursday 1st September 6-8pm

Wundertüte

Exhibition by Michael Kaul & Nicky Hodge

29.August – 4.September, 12-6pm daily
Opening on
Thursday 1st September 6-8pm.

For this exhibition, two established abstract artists have brought together a selection of their paintings to hARTslane.

Michael Kaul (born 1957, Braunschweig, Germany) and Nicky Hodge (born 1957, Birmingham, UK) became familiar with each other’s paintings through instagram and felt that their work showed many affinities. Both painters make mainly monochromatic paintings in which the raw canvas is often exposed, putting emphasis on the edges and margins. Painting wet on wet, there’s a reliance on chance and accident, allowing the process to dictate with washes, bleeds and runs creating ambiguous forms. Differences and distinctions exist in subtle ways but it is the element of surprise – the possibilities that emerge once all the work is brought together in the space – that is the focus of this show. Even where paintings appear quite different in terms of style and feel, there is a sense of dynamism in the interplay as well as a quieter intimacy that exists between them.

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Bills, Drills and Thrills – Saturday 2nd of July, 7-9pm Part of Gravel

Bills, Drills and Thrills

Saturday 2nd of July, 7-9pm

Dear reader,

Since last we spoke in March, a drill has been stolen from the workplace, energy bills have gone through the roof and we are bringing back the thrills of our performance night.

These highs and lows are something we have come to expect of this year of 2022.

On Saturday 2nd July from 7-9pm join us as we embark on an evening of live performance at hARTslane Gallery, featuring 8 artists who are:

Matilde Converio
Georgie Ellul
Kyran Gilbert
Catarina Moura
Conrad Armstrong
Rachel Lonsdale
WENXIN
Jaime Martinez

Doors at 6pm

Limited ticket available, £4 
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bills-drills-and-thrills-tickets-367422028177

There will be a small number of tickets on the door too!

This event is part of Gravel, an ongoing live work programme  

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Exhibitions, Performance

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The Way We Rise Open Exhibition & hARTslane 10 year anniversary!

The Way We Rise

A celebration of creative women to mark the 10-year anniversary of hARTslane

OPENING Friday 22nd of April, 6-9pm / Performances from 7pm 
EXHIBITION OPEN Saturday 23-Sunday 1st of May, 2-7pm

hARTslane is pleased to announce a new art exhibition gathering over 50 artists from South East London.

From the 22nd of April to 30th April, we will mark the 10-year anniversary of hARTslane by transforming the site of the gallery into a hub for creativity and togetherness. The show will be a celebration of female identifying artists and the diverse range of work and life experiences that this encompasses.

The work featured in the exhibition will include: Painting, Drawing, Print, Photography, Sculpture, Performance & Film

Please join us  for the opening on Friday 22nd April 2022 – 6pm – 9pm, with live performance starting at 7pm.

ARTISTS: Anna Ill, Nadina Ali, Stefanie Allen, Cash Aspeek, Janet Barfield, Dagmara Bilon, Karen Bryne, Sara Carlyle, Nachael Catnott, Honor Cicley, Jane Dabate, Linda Dodd, Anna Doepke, Giulia Fassone,  Julia Fernandes, Esther Frouchtman, Victoria Gill, Bijou Gregory, Charlotte Grocutt, Mia Leech, Abigail Hammond, Molly Hankinson, Lily Hargreaves, Livia Harper, Niki Keep, Victoria King, Eloise Knight,  Sion Knight, Chloe Kountourido, Marina Kroyer, Larissa Lachman,  Anna Lou Latham, Luca Leung, Megan Lim, Rachel Lonsdale, Katrina Lyne-Watt, Joanna McCormic, Jane MacKenzie, Rasa Mateviciute, Venetta Nicole,  Taryn O’Reilly, Shamina Peerboccus, Dagne Petraityte, Qianhui Sun, Gill Roth, Tomilyn Rupert, Oie Slate, Katie Surridge, Jinia Tasnin, Lucie Turon, Iris Xu, Tisna Westerhof, Beth Carter Woodhouse.

Curated by Shamina Peerboccus and Rachel Lonsdale

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H! Street project & exhibition by Be Seen Be Heard

H! STREET

A BE SEEN BE HEARD PROJECT
MARCH 2022, NEW CROSS

H! Street is a shop-window exhibition project connecting 10 young black artists of the “Be Seen Be Heard” collective with 10 black owned businesses on the high street of New Cross, London to support the revitalisation of the high street whilst providing opportunity and exposure to the young artists.

Visible 24/7 for the whole month of March 2022.
Coordinated by Jada Perry

Part of We Are Lewisham 2022

Supported by:


1.
Artist: Alexander Adegbite
Title: Chic Djarabi La
Shop: Chic Djarabi La, 152 New Cross Road, SE14 5AR

‘Chic Djarabi La’ is a combination of the French word, connoting stylish elegance, and the Mandingo word connoting love. The poster is supposed to bring about a certain feeling of joy and elegance, with the swirling Ankara threads, the dancing figures inspired by West African art.

Alexander Adegbite is a Nigerian mixed artist based in South London, who works primarily with digital art. He likes to use bold, saturated colours and enjoys painting characters and concepts. 


 2.
Artist: Kai Christodoulou Lee
Title:  
Shop: Smokey Jerkey, 158 New Cross Road, SE14 5BA  

Smokey Jerkey is a Jamaican style restaurant, which serves the local community with its mouth watering secrets. Guarded by the shop founder, these tasty secrets have kept Smokey Jerky thriving for the past 40 years, solidifying its position as a corner stone of the local community.
The goal for this poster is to help appeal to a young target audience of those 16-21, to help build a broad and diverse customer base custom base which is key for growth and the future of small local businesses.

Working on community projects has always been Kai’s passion. Using skills in photography, teaching, media and digital design, he’s been helping community organisations achieve their goals since he was a child. 
 


 3.
Artist: Khadija Harris
Title: New Cross Culture
Shop: Barbershop, 162 New Cross Road, SE14 5AA

I had the chance to meet with one of the owners of ‘Akins Barbers’, a black-owned barbershop located on New Cross High Street. Our meaningful conversation allowed me to understand the beauty of barbershops within our multicultural local area, and what it means for the customers as well as the barbers themselves. 

Barbershops are a huge part of London’s culture; for many black people, hairstyle is associated with their culture and identity, allowing each individual to express themself with just the hair on their head. Barbers do more than just ‘cut the hair’ – they support this self-expression, providing a sense of unity between the customer and the barber.



 4.
Artist: Savanah Thorpe
Title: One Stop 
Shop: Vanity Hair and Beauty Studio, 175 New Cross Rd, SE14 5DG

The artwork’s vision stemmed from the owner’s love of doing people’s hair. Paula’s business rooted from love of hair and developed into a business that incorporated many more beauty treatments.

Savanah is a 19 year old, aspiring Graphic Designer who currently studies graphic design in university and has studied Interactive Digital Design in 6th form. She is currently highly interested in brand & album design.


 5.
Artist: Harmony Latinwo 
Title: Alcinda’s Hair Shop 
Shop: Cinda’s Hair Studio, 262 New Cross Road, SE14 5PL

The poster I have illustrated depicts previous hair styles and makeup that Alcinda showed me when I asked about her shop and what she has worked on. I wanted to display her hairdressing and makeup direction in an impactful- but pleasing way so that passers by would be intrigued. I also included Alcinda as the central focal point of the poster since it’s her shop and her work! Her hairstyles and creative direction stem from her and are available to anyone who enters.

Harmony is a digital artist specialising in character design and illustration. In her art she always likes to communicate an idea or message to the viewer, whether that be through composition or the themes she choses to include in her art.


Michael is a graphic designer that likes music, logo branding, typography, and graphical-abstract design. Throughout his years of studying Fine Art and Graphic Communication, he believes that my areas of interest lie in a geometric form, but he’s open to learn and expand on new skills that provide.

 6.
Artist: Michael Williams (NerdyBoyMike)
Title: Professionalism Is Key, Home Is Love
Shop: Dry Cleaning Point, 266 New Cross Road, SE14 5PL

I visited the store to know what Julian preferred in the poster. When we spoke, he mentioned that he is from Ivory Coast and what made him became a shop owner of the new business. He asked to use some of the colours that resemble his logo while having the slogan saying, “Perfection Is Key.” I researched his cultural background and the area, which is surrounded with old brick houses. With the brick pattern layout combining with the references of African clothing design patterns, I’ve decided to make two artworks, one to be more personal to Julian to keep while the second design is welcoming new customers.


 7.
Artist: Amoré van der Linde 
Title: Connection 
Shop: Cummin Up, 265E New Cross Road, SE14 6AR

I was inspired to create an illustrated poster of a group of people enjoying food from the restaurant, with the atmosphere of community that the space creates. I wanted to incorporate elements of the Caribbean and drew the meals based on food I personally love using Cummin’ up menu photos as references.


8.
Artist: Fiona Quadri
Title: A Place of Joy 
Shop: Divine Cargo, 355 New Cross Rd, SE14 6AT

The shop represents a place of nurture and support, of hope and joy. My painting shows how warm and soulful Bolane’s shop is, by showing lots of different colours. In the middle stands Bolane with her friend and a school child. 

Fiona is a multidisciplinary SE London artist with a focus on illustration. She is exploring themes of Belonging, Race and Ethnicity through the lens of the QUEER BIPOC communities.


9.
Artist: Flynn Richards 
Title: Soul Food 
Shop: Papi’s Grill, 338 NEW CROSS ROAD, SE14 6AG

It was really nice to meet Femi, owner of Papi’s Grill, as he was really welcoming and engaging with my art and my ideas. His restaurant looks cool, and the design is fun yet minimalist.  
My poster called ‘Soul food’, shows Femi, presenting Satay Lamb, his most popular Nigerian dish. Femi and his dish are glowing because the food is made out of love, with the aim to spread the love! 
Flynn Richards is a digital artist and student of Ravensbourne University about to embark on a 2D Animation study at Middlesex University. 
 


10.
Artist: Jada Perry 
Title:  
Shop: Crumble Mania, 395a New Cross Road, SE14 6LA 

I had an amazing experience meeting Shayone and learning about the development of her business. Shayone is an Inspiring role model for young black individuals within the community. The Crumble recipe is something that was passed down from Grandma Mary  through the generations. I gained lots of inspiration for my interview and decided to focus on  the idea of passing things down through generations, along with Crumble Mania’s slogan ‘we eat as one’. So I thought using the layered background could represent each generation with the idea that the newer generations (top layer) are who we should focus on and inspire. The idea of layering also links with the fact that crumble is layered and each layer brings something different.

Jada is a 20 year old graphic designer, currently studying a BA in graphic design at Ravensbourne University. Jada is particularly interested in both typography and editorial design. As a designer Jada enjoys producing work that intrigues and educates people about modern issues in society today.

 

 

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SIrens exhibition opening on Friday 18th of February

SIRENS

Opening: Friday 18th February 6pm-9pm | Live acoustic set by Bity Booker

Exhibition open:
Saturday 19th February 12pm – 6pm
Sunday 20th February 12pm- 5pm

Sirens third exhibition features work from 5 multidisciplinary artist: Bity Booker, Clara Kelly, Mahal de Man, Tony Smith and Victoria King.

Sirens Collective: Discover enticing creations from artists specializing in various disciplines. Featuring interactive sculptures, textile objects, drawings, digital collage, paintings, woodcarving, experimental photo montage and prints. 

@sirens.art.collective

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H! Street by Be Seen Be Heard

H! Street

A BE SEEN BE HEARD EXHIBITION

Open from March 2022 in New Cross

A unique opportunity for 10 black young artists from the Be Seen Be Heard (BSBH) Forum to produce new work and be instrumental in revitalising New Cross Road in a Covid-safe way. Each artist will be commissioned to create an original artwork poster for their partnered business’ shop window. The artists will research the business to make the art work relevant.
This project will benefit and support the black owned business involved through exciting meaningful shop window advertisement.

Postcards of each poster will be produced for the shops to give to their clients. The postcards, which will include details of the project, artists, partners and funders at the back, will extend the impact and reach of the exhibition even further, becoming collectable, limited edition, mini artworks.

A digital map of the H! Street trail will be available in March.

Supported by: 

  • Lewisham Council logo

  • 01_We Are Lewisham_With Descriptor_Orange_RGB

  • HMG Logo

  • LogoERDF_Col_Portrait

LINK TO BSBH

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Ghost Show: The Nightmare Before Christmas

GHOST SHOW

The Nightmare Before Christmas

On a dark dark night, on dark dark street, in a dark dark gallery…comes Ghost Show: A Nightmare Before Christmas. On Tuesday 14th of December, for one-night-only, hARTslane gallery will be hosting a spooky spoofy group show imagined by Rory Beard and Kavitha Balasingham. Doors [creek] open @ 6pm.

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Heartfelt City

Heartfelt City

A presentation of photographs by Nikolaos Akritidis
Curated by Anna Spyropoulos
Art Direction by Adriana López Martín

Opening: Monday 6 December 6-9pm
Exhibition open from 11am to 7pm from 7-11 December
Finissage (Reading event): Saturday 11 December 6-9pm

Join us at hARTslane Gallery for Heartfelt City, a presentation of photographs by Nikolaos Akritidis open from 7-11 December. Since arriving to London in 2015 at the age of 17, his artistic practice has evolved alongside the discovery of the urban landscape. During this time, he has built a photographic archive that charts a deep appreciation for the city and the encounters it provokes.

The selection presented at hARTslane Gallery captures the beauty of mundane experiences in late 2010’s London up to the pandemic and Fall 2021. The three photographic series displayed touch upon the themes of cultural memory, critical heritage studies, and urban ecology, recording life during a period of great political, technological, and social change for the city. This is the first solo presentation of his artistic output to date, after participating in group exhibitions in the UK, and Italy.
The exhibition maps the last six years, documenting subject matter that is both personal; loved ones and significant moments, along with the impersonal; London as a city in constant political and social flux, a metropolis with an ever-evolving concrete visage. The images presented in this exhibition disregard chronology and are displayed by theme and feeling, yet a clear arc emerges tracing a nascent photographical eye into an aware approach to image-making over time. It is an exhibition through which a resolute practice and persistence towards capturing memory bears fruit – a love-letter to London, where one is struck by the genuine optimism and joy found in experiences of the city.

Nikolaos Akritidis (b. 1997, Brussels, Belgium) is a Greek artist and curator working in London, Brussels, and Athens. His work documents urban contexts, the cultural memory carried by their inhabitants, and the histories found between layers of the built environment. With a focus on urban ecology and experiences of migration, Akritidis traces the coexistence of human and more-than-human lives that give breath to the city’s constant state of becoming. A graduate of Goldsmiths and UCL, his photographs have been published in Art & Music, and British Vogue, while he has recently participated in projects in partnership with the UCL Urban Lab (Online), Deptford X (London), and a.topos gallery (Venice).

This exhibition is generously supported by Bayeux, Varylab, and the Exhibitions Hub at Goldsmiths, University of London

 
 

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DRAWING IN//DRAWING OUT Exhibition opening on 25th of November, 5-8pm

DRAWING IN // DRAWING OUT

EXHIBITION

25-29 November, 10am-6pm

‘Drawing In/Drawing Out’ brings together a group of artists who met, drew and grew together whilst studying on the Drawing Intensive course at the Royal Drawing School during the Spring-Summer of 2021.

Each artist comes from a different background, with a diverse range of nationalities, age groups and experiences, from fine art to history of art, architecture, science and literature. Each with their own uniquely individual practice, they are bound together by a drive to draw and to explore various forms of materiality and mark making in order to bring their ideas to life on paper.

Whilst they all structured their Drawing Intensive term in distinct ways, they were able to share ideas and learn from each other mutually, especially after a long period of introspection driven by the pandemic.

The exhibition at hARTSlane space will feature some of their best work from their time at the Royal Drawing School alongside the pieces they have made since, thus bridging the space between their individual practices and the lessons learnt on the course. The selection of work will include drawings, paintings, prints, sketchbooks and other creations.

‘Drawing In/Drawing Out’ will bring into play elements of experimentation and communal learning, which were fundamental to the artists’ experience at the Royal Drawing School and still continue to nourish their art practices. 

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