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vandalism for promotional purposes. Bands mentioned did not even exist at time of Lyndhurst Way and were never associated with the exhibitions →‎See Also
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{{short description|2000s occupied art space in south London}}
78 Lyndhurst Way was a squat in a Victorian-period house in Peckham, South East London, England, which was known predominantly as an art exhibitions space run by a group of young artists in their mid-twenties. The artists who initiated, 'Lyndhurst Way' exhibitions were James Balmforth, Bobby Dowler, Christopher Green, Oliver Griffin and Shaun McDowell. Lyndhurst Way is also renowned for being the nucleus which the [http://hannahbarry.com/ Hannah Barry Gallery] emerged from in January 2008. The Lyndhurst Way exhibitions began with '10 Rooms and a Sculpture Garden' on November 3, 2006, and closed with [http://boldtendencies.com/ 'Bold Tendencies'] ending October 7, 2007. The Peckham Pavilion, one of the first Unofficial Pavilions (Venice Biennale) represented the Hannah Barry Gallery at the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009. This included many Lyndhurst Way artists including the core group. Lyndhurst Way is sometimes referred to as an art collective, the "core" group of artists have worked together on international group shows including [http://peckhamnewyorkparis.com/ "PECKHAMNEWYORKPARIS"]
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
[[File:Penshurst Place, 78 Lyndhurst Way, March 2018.jpg|thumb|78 Lyndhurst Way in 2018]]
'''78 Lyndhurst Way''' was a [[Squatting|squatted]] [[artist-run space]] in a [[Grade II]] listed Victorian-period house in [[Peckham]], [[London]] in 2005 or earlier.

==Project==
The [[artist cooperative]] which initiated the Lyndhurst Way exhibitions was composed of James Balmforth, Bobby Dowler, Christopher Green, Oliver Eales, Simon Simon Milner, [[Oliver Griffin]] and Shaun McDowell. The Lyndhurst Way exhibitions began with '10 Rooms and a Sculpture Garden' on 3 November 2006, and closed with 'Bold Tendencies' ending 7 October 2007. The Peckham Pavilion, one of the first Unofficial Pavilions (Venice Biennale) represented the Hannah Barry Gallery at the [[53rd Venice Biennale]] in 2009. This included many Lyndhurst Way artists including the core group. Lyndhurst Way is sometimes referred to as an art collective, the "core" group of artists have worked together on international group shows including "PECKHAMNEWYORKPARIS". Lyndhurst Way was also the nucleus from which the Hannah Barry Gallery emerged from in January 2008.<ref>'10 Rooms and a Sculpture Garden', [[Saatchi Gallery]] blog, 10.2006</ref><ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/artblog/2006/nov/03/arthouse 'Art House'], [[The Guardian]]: Arts Blog, 03.11.2006</ref><ref>[http://www.timeout.com/london/art/features/2885/Peckham_art_squats.html 'Peckham Art Squats'] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101010082513/http://www.timeout.com/london/art/features/2885/Peckham_art_squats.html |date=2010-10-10 }} [[Time Out (company)|Time Out magazine]], 04.2007</ref><ref>'Having Fun with Figures', [[The Financial Times]], 19.05.2007</ref><ref>[https://archive.today/20130505064240/http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/lifestyle/article-23757203-londons-artists-the-peckham-set.do 'The Peckham Set'], [[The Evening Standard]] E S magazine, 16.10.09</ref><ref>[http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/33192/london-calling/ 'London Calling'], Modern Painters, 01.12.2009</ref><ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2009/apr/12/artists-collectives-squats 'The artists who are hot to squat'] [[The Observer]], 12.04.2009</ref>


== Exhibitions ==
== Exhibitions ==


Seven of the exhibitions were held in the squat house at number 78 Lyndhurst Way, the Grade II listed Victorian building followed by two off-site projects initiated by Hannah Barry with spaces provided by Southwark Council. The first of which was held at the now defunct Area10 project space in Peckham, and the second and final exhibition being the inauguration of the Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project which was originally held on the rooftop of Sumner House, an old school building in North Peckham.
Seven of the exhibitions were held in the squat house at number 78 Lyndhurst Way, the Grade II listed Victorian building followed by two off-site projects initiated by Hannah Barry with spaces provided by Southwark Council. The first of which was held at the now defunct Area10 project space in Peckham, and the second and final exhibition being the inauguration of the Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project which was originally held on the rooftop of Sumner House, an old school building in North Peckham.<ref>'Monumental Painting, Sculpture and Film', [[The Financial Times]], 4 August 2007</ref>


Since the end of the 'Lyndhurst Way' exhibitions the core artists went on to be represented by [http://hannahbarry.com/ Hannah Barry Gallery,] and the [http://boldtendencies.com/ Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project] continues each summer on the rooftop of Peckham multistory car-park
Since the end of the 'Lyndhurst Way' exhibitions the core artists went on to be represented by Hannah Barry Gallery,<ref>[http://www.hannahbarry.com/ hannah barry gallery]</ref> and the Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project continues each summer on the rooftop of Peckham multistory car-park.<ref>'Bold Tendencies II', [[The Financial Times]], 12 July 2008</ref>


* BOLD TENDENCIES 1, 29 September – 7 October 2007
* MONUMENTAL PAINTING SCULPTURE & FILM, 7–14 August 2007
* INTERNATIONAL TIMES: NEW WORKS OF ART BY YOUNG FOREIGN ARTISTS, 29 July – 5 August 2007
* BUILDING AND BREAKING: DRAWING IN PENCIL, 24–30 June 2007
* EXPERIMENTS WITH FIGURATION, 20–26 May 2007
* LANDSCAPE, FILM AND PHOTOGRAPHY, 14–21 April 2007
* SMALL PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE, 24–31 March 2007
* COLOUR AND LINE, 27 January – 2 February 2007
* 10 ROOMS AND A SCULPTURE GARDEN, 4–8 November 2006

== Exhibited artists ==

A total of 55 young artists were shown in the exhibitions -

Michael Allen
Simon Auld
Max Bacharach
Tom Barnett
Pawel Benes
Raphaele Bidault-Waddington
Katie Blyth
Tim Bouckley
Kristoffer Busch
Gareth Cadwallader

James Capper
Nathan Cash Davidson
C'est Moi Ce Soir
Simon Christopher
Michael Conrads
Riccardo Del Conte
Fu Deng
Oliver Eales
Neil Farber
Andy Forshaw

Laura Gill
James Hankey
Rosemary Hudson
Adelita Husni Bey
Konsta Huusko
Nick Jeffrey
Asta Kalpokaite
Konstantina Kapanidou
Marcus Kleinfeld
Henrik Lindal

Alex Massouras
R. Mehearties
Simon Milner
Lucy Moore
Renata Pasel
Marta Pierobon
James Quinn
Grit Richter
Paul Searle
Meg Shirayama

Harvey Somerfield
Samuel Sparrow
Matthew Stone
Danny Sturgess
Kwang-Sung Hong
Lynton Talbot
Liesel Thomas
Sasha Vinci
Edward Wallace
Nicola Wallis


== See Also ==


* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artist-run_space Artist-run space]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unofficial_Pavilions_%28Venice_Biennale%29 Unofficial Pavilions (Venice Biennale)]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artist_cooperative Artist cooperative]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/!WOWOW! !WOWOW!]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto_Italia_South_East Auto Italia South East]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_Racing City Racing]


== See also ==
*[[Auto Italia South East]]
*[[City Racing]]
*[[!WOWOW!]]


== References ==
{{Reflist}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20180324101559/http://lyndhurstway.co.uk/ Archived Lyndhurst Way website]
* [http://www.peckhamnewyorkparis.com PECKHAMNEWYORKPARIS website]
* [http://www.peckhamnewyorkparis.com PECKHAMNEWYORKPARIS website]
* [http://www.spaceplatform.net Lyndhurst Way website]
* [http://www.boldtendencies.com/ Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project website]
* [http://www.boldtendencies.com/ Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project website]
* [http://www.hannahbarry.com Hannah Barry Gallery website]
* [http://www.hannahbarry.com Hannah Barry Gallery website]


{{Coord|51.4706|-0.0743|type:landmark_region:GB-SWK|display=title}}


{{SquatE&W}}
== References ==


[[Category:Houses in the London Borough of Southwark]]
* '10 Rooms and a Sculpture Garden', Saatchi Gallery blog, 10.2006
[[Category:Peckham]]
* [http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/artblog/2006/nov/03/arthouse 'Art House', The Guardian: Arts Blog, 03.11.2006]
[[Category:Squats in the United Kingdom]]
* [http://www.timeout.com/london/art/peckham-art-squats 'Peckham Art Squats' Time Out magazine, 04.2007]
* 'Having Fun with Figures', The Financial Times, 19.05.2007
* [http://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/londons-artists-the-peckham-set-6799602.html 'The Peckham Set'], The Evening Standard E S magazine, 16.10.09
* [http://www.blouinartinfo.com/news/story/33192/london-calling/ 'London Calling'], Modern Painters, 01.12.2009
* 'The artists who are hot to squat' The Observer, 12.04.2009
* 'Monumental Painting, Sculpture and Film', The Financial Times, 04.08.2007

Latest revision as of 16:56, 16 March 2024

78 Lyndhurst Way in 2018

78 Lyndhurst Way was a squatted artist-run space in a Grade II listed Victorian-period house in Peckham, London in 2005 or earlier.

Project[edit]

The artist cooperative which initiated the Lyndhurst Way exhibitions was composed of James Balmforth, Bobby Dowler, Christopher Green, Oliver Eales, Simon Simon Milner, Oliver Griffin and Shaun McDowell. The Lyndhurst Way exhibitions began with '10 Rooms and a Sculpture Garden' on 3 November 2006, and closed with 'Bold Tendencies' ending 7 October 2007. The Peckham Pavilion, one of the first Unofficial Pavilions (Venice Biennale) represented the Hannah Barry Gallery at the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009. This included many Lyndhurst Way artists including the core group. Lyndhurst Way is sometimes referred to as an art collective, the "core" group of artists have worked together on international group shows including "PECKHAMNEWYORKPARIS". Lyndhurst Way was also the nucleus from which the Hannah Barry Gallery emerged from in January 2008.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

Exhibitions[edit]

Seven of the exhibitions were held in the squat house at number 78 Lyndhurst Way, the Grade II listed Victorian building followed by two off-site projects initiated by Hannah Barry with spaces provided by Southwark Council. The first of which was held at the now defunct Area10 project space in Peckham, and the second and final exhibition being the inauguration of the Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project which was originally held on the rooftop of Sumner House, an old school building in North Peckham.[8]

Since the end of the 'Lyndhurst Way' exhibitions the core artists went on to be represented by Hannah Barry Gallery,[9] and the Bold Tendencies Sculpture Project continues each summer on the rooftop of Peckham multistory car-park.[10]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ '10 Rooms and a Sculpture Garden', Saatchi Gallery blog, 10.2006
  2. ^ 'Art House', The Guardian: Arts Blog, 03.11.2006
  3. ^ 'Peckham Art Squats' Archived 2010-10-10 at the Wayback Machine Time Out magazine, 04.2007
  4. ^ 'Having Fun with Figures', The Financial Times, 19.05.2007
  5. ^ 'The Peckham Set', The Evening Standard E S magazine, 16.10.09
  6. ^ 'London Calling', Modern Painters, 01.12.2009
  7. ^ 'The artists who are hot to squat' The Observer, 12.04.2009
  8. ^ 'Monumental Painting, Sculpture and Film', The Financial Times, 4 August 2007
  9. ^ hannah barry gallery
  10. ^ 'Bold Tendencies II', The Financial Times, 12 July 2008

External links[edit]

51°28′14″N 0°04′27″W / 51.4706°N 0.0743°W / 51.4706; -0.0743

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