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Exhibited artists included [[Neil Farber]], [[Matthew Stone]], James Capper and Nathan Cash Davidson. A total of 55 young artists were shown in the exhibitions - |
Exhibited artists included [[Neil Farber]], [[Matthew Stone]], James Capper and Nathan Cash Davidson. A total of 55 young artists were shown in the exhibitions - |
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Michael Allen |
Michael Allen, |
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Simon Auld |
Simon Auld, |
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Max Bacharach |
Max Bacharach, |
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Tom Barnett |
Tom Barnett, |
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Pawel Benes |
Pawel Benes, |
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Raphaele Bidault-Waddington |
Raphaele Bidault-Waddington, |
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Katie Blyth |
Katie Blyth, |
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Tim Bouckley |
Tim Bouckley, |
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Kristoffer Busch |
Kristoffer Busch, |
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Gareth Cadwallader |
Gareth Cadwallader, |
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James Capper |
James Capper, |
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Nathan Cash Davidson |
Nathan Cash Davidson, |
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C'est Moi Ce Soir |
C'est Moi Ce Soir, |
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Simon Christopher |
Simon Christopher, |
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Michael Conrads |
Michael Conrads, |
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Riccardo Del Conte |
Riccardo Del Conte, |
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Fu Deng |
Fu Deng, |
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Oliver Eales |
Oliver Eales, |
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Neil Farber |
Neil Farber, |
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Andy Forshaw |
Andy Forshaw, |
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Laura Gill |
Laura Gill, |
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James Hankey |
James Hankey, |
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Rosemary Hudson |
Rosemary Hudson, |
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Adelita Husni Bey |
Adelita Husni Bey, |
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Konsta Huusko |
Konsta Huusko, |
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Nick Jeffrey |
Nick Jeffrey, |
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Asta Kalpokaite |
Asta Kalpokaite, |
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Konstantina Kapanidou |
Konstantina Kapanidou, |
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Marcus Kleinfeld |
Marcus Kleinfeld, |
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Henrik Lindal |
Henrik Lindal, |
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Alex Massouras |
Alex Massouras, |
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R. Mehearties |
R. Mehearties, |
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Simon Milner |
Simon Milner, |
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Lucy Moore |
Lucy Moore, |
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Renata Pasel |
Renata Pasel, |
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Marta Pierobon |
Marta Pierobon, |
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James Quinn |
James Quinn, |
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Grit Richter |
Grit Richter, |
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Paul Searle |
Paul Searle, |
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Meg Shirayama |
Meg Shirayama, |
||
Harvey Somerfield |
Harvey Somerfield, |
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Samuel Sparrow |
Samuel Sparrow, |
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Matthew Stone |
Matthew Stone, |
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Danny Sturgess |
Danny Sturgess, |
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Kwang-Sung Hong |
Kwang-Sung Hong, |
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Lynton Talbot |
Lynton Talbot, |
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Liesel Thomas |
Liesel Thomas, |
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Sasha Vinci |
Sasha Vinci, |
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Edward Wallace |
Edward Wallace, |
||
Nicola Wallis |
Nicola Wallis, |
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== See also == |
== See also == |
Revision as of 19:33, 10 December 2013
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 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 '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 "PECKHAMNEWYORKPARIS".[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
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.[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]
Exhibited artists
Exhibited artists included Neil Farber, Matthew Stone, James Capper and Nathan Cash Davidson. 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
- Artist-run space
- Punk house
- Squatting in England and Wales
- Unofficial Pavilions (Venice Biennale)
- Squatting
- Artist cooperative
- !WOWOW!
- Auto Italia South East
- LuckyPDF
- City Racing
- Spike Surplus Scheme
- Da! collective
- Commune
References
- ^ '10 Rooms and a Sculpture Garden', Saatchi Gallery blog, 10.2006
- ^ 'Art House', The Guardian: Arts Blog, 03.11.2006
- ^ 'Peckham Art Squats' Time Out magazine, 04.2007
- ^ 'Having Fun with Figures', The Financial Times, 19.05.2007
- ^ 'The Peckham Set', The Evening Standard E S magazine, 16.10.09
- ^ '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
- ^ hannah barry gallery
- ^ 'Bold Tendencies II', The Financial Times, 12.07.2008