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Tag: Exhibitions

New Narratives

NEW NARRATIVES

Exhibition

Part of Room 6.3

As part of ROOM 6.3 / Dear London (November 2017-May 2018), hARTslane presented New Narratives, where we celebrated the empty, forgotten buildings in London and imagine a new use for them, a new relation between people and space, where humanity is at heart.
The show brought together architects, designers and artists who are invited to present projects and ideas where empty unusual spaces are reconfigured and used for social rather than economic benefit.

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS 
Rachael Bowyer | Kevin Brennan | Cedric Christie, Benedict Philpott, Byony Bridge (flute) &  Peter Paul Nash | Guy Forrester & Sven Mündner | Nayan Kulkarni | Maria Lothe | Pat Meagher | Louise Melchior, Carolyn Clewer, Tiphaine de Lussy | Kate Murdoch | Marta Nowicka & Voytek Ketz | Ethan Pettit | Fred Rigby | Margit Sbicca Mulder | Sigrun Sverrisdottir | Lucy Tauber | Anna Versteeg, Naomi Shaw, Ioana Marinescu & Tapio Snellman.

Images from the Artists Talk by Pat Meager

Kate Murdoch’s Review of New Narratives

Room 6.3 Dear London

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Exhibitions

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Artists and Mental Health (Room 6.4)

ROOM 6.4

Artists and Mental Health
September 2018 – February 2019

image @ Jude Cowan Montague

“Madness is a gift from the gods.” Plato”We of the craft are all crazy.”- Lord Byron

Is mental health a problem or a gift? One in four adults lives with a mental health condition yet this illness often remains shrouded. hARTslane is offering a platform to examine mental health through the experience of artists and their work, to raise awareness and to advocate for the arts as a tool to wellbeing. 


Programme:
”Control”, 20- 23 September 2018, also part of DeptfordX Fringe

”INTRUSIONS”, 11-14 October 2018, Exhibition

”A Place for Friends”, 12-19 November 2018, Exhibition

“In Need of Space”, 20 November, An evening of talks focusing on practical and possible methods to work through the problem of space in London.

”PASSAGGIATINA“, 6-8 December 2018, Exhibition featuring Passaggiatina Residency artists

”No Wall Space”, 17-19 December 2018, Exhibition

”Love on the Isle of Dogs and other Intimate Stories”, 18-21 January 2019, Exhibition

”Rubble”, 28 February 2019, site specific installation, Camberwell College of Arts


ROOM 6.0 – ONGOING EXHIBITION PROPOSALS – Temporary suspended. 
With an aim to break down barriers and to provide affordable and accessible opportunities to produce, exhibit and inspire, hARTslane has introduced ROOM 6.0, an ongoing submission platform, inviting artists, curators and creative practitioners to contribute with an exhibition or art event, regardless of experience level, curriculum or background. 
ROOM 6.0 focuses on a relevant contemporary issue every 6 months and provides a forum for exploration and cultural engagement on current affairs. 
The specific topic can be addressed through collaborative and site specific projects, exhibitions, workshops, talks and screenings. The programme welcomes proposals from UK based as well as international art practitioners. Please note hARTslane doesn’t accept solo show presentations, nor is this a call out for individual artists to be part of a show. Proposals should describe focused, idea-driven, original group exhibitions and projects.

For guidelines and application form, please send an email to info@hartslane.org.
For a floorplan of hARTslane, please click 
here.

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Exhibitions, Opportunities

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Unseen & Unspoken (Room 6.5)

ROOM 6.5

Unseen & Unspoken
June – November 2019

Image @ Tom Dale

“What matters is precisely this: the unspoken at the edge of the spoken.” – Virginia Wolf

“Unseen & Unspoken” aimed to give visibility to the under-represented and unheard voices in our society, untold stories and unexplored realities to reveal and share.

 


Programme:

24-30 June 2019, “All the things I cannot say” Exhibition by Erika Trotzig, Jenny Klein and Alex Dixon.

22-28 July 2019, ”RIOT SOUP”, Residency & Exhibition @riotsoup

11 September 2019, SHADO presents “GLOBAL” I am a Woman, a photography exhibition and live music event to celebrate the work of 20 photographers form around the world.

16-22 September 2019, ”The Peculiar Space Between Things”, Exhibition by Sinéid Codd Sharon Haward

25-29 September 2019, “A Visual Symphony”, Exhibition by Livia Garcia and Martin Harris

30 September – 6 October 2019, ”Wasteland 2.0”, site-specific installation by Ka Ian Hoi, Rita Castanheira, Pui Pui Ip, Lelia Byron, Xiao Jing Li, and Yao Yao Yu.

17 October – 3 November 2019, “Murmuratium” by Drawing Connections. Part of DeptfordX and Art Licks Week end.

6-9 December 2019, “Through the Unknown, we’ll find the New”, group exhibition curated by Nikos Akritidis.
With: Jun Ainouta, Victor Dantcikian, Giorgia Galantino & Frankie Parham, Margaret Jennings, Lucas Lauridsen, Maria Lissoni, Alejandra Lopez, Aron Mathe, Daniel Törnell, Nathan Troussard, Uchercie, Marina Vallejo


ROOM 6.0 – ONGOING EXHIBITION PROPOSALS – Temporary suspended. 
With an aim to break down barriers and to provide affordable and accessible opportunities to produce, exhibit and inspire, hARTslane has introduced ROOM 6.0, an ongoing submission platform, inviting artists, curators and creative practitioners to contribute with an exhibition or art event, regardless of experience level, curriculum or background. 
ROOM 6.0 focuses on a relevant contemporary issue every 6 months and provides a forum for exploration and cultural engagement on current affairs. 
The specific topic can be addressed through collaborative and site specific projects, exhibitions, workshops, talks and screenings. The programme welcomes proposals from UK based as well as international art practitioners. Please note hARTslane doesn’t accept solo show presentations, nor is this a call out for individual artists to be part of a show. Proposals should describe focused, idea-driven, original group exhibitions and projects.

For guidelines and application form, please send an email to info@hartslane.org.
For a floorplan of hARTslane, please click 
here.

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Exhibitions, Opportunities

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Relay Residency (Room 6.6)

  • Mathias Gontard

    29 June – 19 July

  • WhittyGordon Projects

    27 July – 16 August

  • Sam Schmitt

    24 August – 11 September

  • Blackbird Collective

    21 September – 9 October

  • Diana Puntar

    19 October – 6 November

  • Dagmara Bilon

    16 November – 6 December

hARTslane offered 6 London based artists with a socially engaged practice, individual residency opportunities to research and produce work that responds to the impact of the unprecedented current times.

There is now a window of opportunity for artists to send important messages to the world, re-imagine a new normal, one that is kinder and more community minded. A society that treasures its people and its environment.

Like in an athletic relay race, each artist worked in solitude then passed on the ‘baton’ for the next artist to continue. The baton was in the form of a journal, a metaphor for team effort: artists were expected to engage with the whole process of Relay, connect and support their fellow residents.

At the end of each residency there was a presentation day and artist talk, all set within Covid-19 safety guidelines. A final exhibition will be organised in 2021.

> Room 6.6 Relay Residency Book by Francesca Tatcher

 

 

Supported by

Mathias Gontard

29 June  – 19 July

ROOM 6.6 Relay is the first time I will be turning my practice towards my local area for an extended period of time. Iʼve been based around Peckham/New Cross also for almost 5 years and though I have been taking images in this time it was always a scattered exercise.

During the residency I would like to highlight the characteristic features of the area surrounding the space, survey and represent local residentsʼ ties to the neighbourhood and current state of mind within the community ‘s well as bring members of the public together in the context of the exhibition space. Through conducting interviews and making portraits I would like to engage in a conversation about the present moment. I hope to seize a portion of reality in the form of a documentary body of work that will overall show how the area was observed and experienced.

I would like to bring the public together in the space by engaging with different aspects of the local community. This would be done in two immediate ways : by engaging with peers and connections I already have that in the local community both in situ and off site ; and by portraying members of the public I will encounter on the streets. These encounters will be collected and exhibited in the space. Over the three weeks the space will be a development studio, progressively filling with images and evolving towards a final install’tion to be on display over the last weekend of the residency. Mixing different images of varied subjects in order to paint a cross section of the visual landscape and socio-economic context of the location. The presentation will consist of prints, slideshows, video and sound.

The final installation will be somewhat based on the idea of a collage. I will be balancing different image based expressions together in the space through creating several short series. Black and white 35mm and colour medium format will be my roaming partners, gathering sound recordings as I go. I will also use transparency and video for portraits which will be a bit more studio like. This patchwork will represent the different elements I would like to document and discover in the course of the show. Over the course of the final weekend people that have been photographed will be invited along with other members of the public to encounter each other in the space.

 


WhittyGordon Projects

27 July – 16 August

For Relay 6.6 WhittyGordon plan to engage with the local community, particularly women 50+ to produce a moving image and photography installation.
We want to generate broader discussions on loneliness, isolation and the aftermath of the pandemic and lockdown. We will be asking questions such as…
How are they coping with the ‘new normal’ in a positive way?
Do you suffer from isolation and loneliness?
What are the best and worst impacts of COVID on your life?
What does the future hold?
How have Black Lives Matters and recent global events affected you?

We will be interviewing women from all backgrounds to get a broader picture in hARTslane and the local community (observing social distancing guidelines at all times). The aim of the project is to collaborate with participants to develop a visual portrait of their everyday lives and stories. The stories collected into a moving image film and series of portraits will be exhibited at hARTslane in December as part of Relay Room 6.6 group exhibition.


Sam Schmitt

24 August – 11 September

“Sam Schmitt explore the strategies developed by vegetal life to reproduce in the brick and mortar od the city. If only they were allowed to take over the porous urban infrastructure in waves of ecological succession, plants would eventually transform our neighbouroods into what they used to be: forest. Ruderal Consciousness shown what Sam allowed them to do over the past fours weeks working in the space.

At a time where a majority of people are thinking introspectively amid the traumatisams of 2020, this work focuses on creating a soave of escape and healing. It observes the regenerative potential of nature and invites visitors to a fleeting presentation. The depleted soils used in the show has been enriched and rejuvenated by growing nitrogen fixing cloves, and will be donated to local residents to continue its cycle in the area after the show.” Text by Nikos Akritidis.

 


Blackbird Collective

21 September – 9 October

BLKBRD is a collective of artists, from different disciplines who work together to create artworks. They are concerned with honouring the sacrifices of migrants to Britain today and through out time. From the transatlantic slave trade, to the contemporary refugee crisis, the Windrush scandal, to the disproportionate BAME death toll for COVID-19. Their aim is to explore the traditionally underrepresented legacies of migration to the UK.

During their residency, they will explore sculptural processes. More specifically looking at recreating characters and stories that they developed during the lockdown period. Their aim is to create large scale plaster figurative sculptures and an immersive sculptural installation that will include a sound scape and some 2D works. BLKBRD will continue to explore themes of migration in the local and the broader context, exploring the forgotten histories and testimonies of the marginalised. Looking at stories of migrants endless journeys, their impossible conviction and the trail of uncertainty. They will collaborate with the local community to curate the finalised installation. 

 


Diana Puntar

19 October – 6 November

Test Site Two From The Milky Way

We shall by morning
Inherit the earth
Our foot’s in the door

Mushrooms by Sylvia Plath

Like mycelium the way forward is through creating mutually supportive networks that support the development of radical strategies.

In 2009 I started my ongoing project “The Milky Way”, a project combining utopian dreams with my interest in mycology. Essential to the project is collaboration, taking place as either elaborate or simple mushroom dinners, dialogues, and political interventions. At hARTslane I’ll be working for three weeks on a new installation, “Test Site Two from The Milky Way”. I’ll be growing mushrooms in a pop-up disco/terrarium and experimenting on how to make new materials out of fungi. Guests are welcome to cook some mushrooms and talk about radical new strategies to address current local and global issues.

Diana Puntar is a London based artist originally from New York City. She has exhibited both in the US and internationally including at MoMA, PARTICIPANT INC, and Blackston. Puntar has received grants from The Pollack Krasner Foundation, The New York Foundation for the Arts, and The Arts Council among others.


Dagmara Bilon

16 November – 6 December

Community Engagement & Performance Research, ‘Letters to my Un-dying Love’ & Launch of Lockdown Art Baby ‘Hungry4HumanContact’

During the ROOM 6.6 Relay Residency interdisciplinary artist Dagmara Bilon will distribute letters to the local residents inviting them to write a letter to a loved person, who they lost and write all the things that one might have wanted to say but were not able to say.

Letters to my Un-dying Love’ is a delicate investigation into saying the things we wanted to say but couldn’t, hold space for grieve, loss-and healing.

This call out especially addresses members in the community who might have lost loved ones during the time of the pandemic and due to social distancing rules were not able to be present at the time of death, or other circumstance of death experienced in their life time that still prevails.

The period of the lockdown has been a time for challenging isolation, as well as an opportunity to be closer with oneself, away from outer distractions and closer to feelings present. This is not always easy and especially where difficult feelings emerge.

How to process difficult feelings? How can we acknowledge and heal from loss? What roles can the arts play in facilitating a dialogue about death? How can we open up to empathy and come together to feel with others? Are some of the questions present for the residency at hARTslane.

Letters will be posted and collected at hARTslane Gallery and be a starting point for performance research of new work of ‘My un-dying Love’ with Himherandit Productions to be premiered in the year 2021.

Simultaneously to the 3-week letter engagement, Bilon will enter a process of solitary making looking into rituals of loss and death, investigating held emotions related to grieve in her own body and document processes via photography and video. Content of material will be shared and explored with her physically distanced collaborator Andreas Constantinou through the help of WhatsUp.

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Be Seen, Be Heard – Young Black Creatives Forum

Be Seen, Be Heard
Young Black Creatives Forum

A platform to support young black artists in Lewisham & South East London

Be Seen, Be Heard aims to introduce fresh voices into the visual conversations that echo round our cities as well as provide a forum to debate the roles of art, visual activism and change within the art world. 

Our intent is to create opportunities for exposure, paid work, networking and professional development for black creatives aged 16-25 in Lewisham and South East London.  

As an art gallery, we are committed to listen, learn, evolve and to further diversify the art world, not only in representation but also in the leadership.

Team:
BSBH Coordinator: Jada Perry 
BSBH Assistant Coordinator: Flynn Richards

BSBH Mentor:
Frederica Agbah 

Contact:
beseenbeheardse14@gmail.com
IG @beseenbeheardse14
#beseenbeheardse14

Supported by

Latest Projects

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Art and Design Talk

Online workshop

Do you ever get stuck in the creative process? 

Join us to discuss and share helpful tips and tricks on design processes and ways to achieve successful outcomes. 

BSBH 2020 Award

The jury panel selected the best entry to win the BSBH 2020 Award: Congratulations to Jas Nandoo who submitted her artwork ’Only half’

BSBH 2020 Jury members:

  • Fred Agbah, artist and photographer
  • Cedric Christie, artist
  • Shereener Browne Hudson, actor and theatre producer
  • Cedric Whilby, community enabler

13th Amendement

Dance

As part of the BSBH Forum, Urdang Dance Students Anya & Remi Ferdinand created a workshop with their fellow dance students exploring the 13th amendment through expressive movement.

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BSBH 2020 Art for POSTER-ity

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Support the young Be Seen, Be Heard artists by purchasing an A3 limited edition art poster!

BSBH 2020: Art for POSTERity in Lewisham

A project and exhibition featuring poster artworks of young black artists from Lewisham and South East London.

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BSBH 2020: Art for POSTERity in Lewisham

A project and exhibition featuring poster artworks of young black artists from Lewisham and South East London.

The first exhibition organised by the Be Seen, Be Heard Youth Forum, brought together 50 black artists and creatives from Lewisham & South East London celebrating black lives as well as addressing disparity, marginalisation and the need for change.

Street posters have continually been used as a powerful form of protest and a symbol of visual activism. The skill set used to make posters range from folk art inspired works to slick graphics by professional artists and designers. In a poster, the art is repeated and its message is multiplied as the energy and enthusiasm that they evoke, can contribute to meaningful change.

All poster-artworks are for sale as limited editions at an affordable price of £30. The profits will be divided between the young artist and the BSBH Forum fund to continue to create opportunities for young black creatives in Lewisham. The exhibition features work made by painters, illustrators, graphic designers, social activists, dancers, fashion designers, mixed media and fine artists, who created unexpected, thought-provoking contributions to the urban spectacle in the form of a digital image / poster.

Art for POSTER-ity in Lewisham was coordinated by Jada Perry, Visual Communication student at Ravensbourne University & Flynn Richards, Interactive Digital Design student at the Brit School; with the mentoring support of Cedric Whilby, community enabler.
Be Seen, Be Heard: Art for Poster-ity in Lewisham is kindly supported by Lewisham Council.

Exhibition in hARTslane: postponed to 2021

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