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London Underground brings art gallery to the streets of Southwark

29 April 2009

A striking new 37 metre artwork showing a brightly coloured world will bring the feel of an art gallery to the streets of Southwark next month.

I hope that the work invites the public, particularly the local community, to talk to station staff about the local cultural sites

Artist Peter McDonald

Commissioned by Art on the Underground, this large-scale work created by Peter McDonald, rising star of the British art world, will be installed outside Southwark Underground station from 7 May 2009. 

Art for everyone

Running along The Cut and Blackfriars Road, the work entitled Art for Everyone plays with the idea of transforming a public space into a place for art.

McDonald, who won the coveted John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize in 2008, has been artist-in-residence at the station since early this year.

During this time, he has created a new series of paintings, inspired by his discussions with station staff, visits with them to Tate Modern, and the station's role in providing connection to the theatres and galleries in the area.

Some of McDonald's paintings, inspired by the daily life of the station, have been designed as badges for staff and customers to wear, making the artwork available to the community on a new, more personal scale.

Inspired by the control room

Artist Peter McDonald, said: 'I really enjoyed spending time with the station staff and was particularly inspired by the control room which felt like a new world for me, something which really inspired my paintings. 

'I hope that the work invites the public, particularly the local community, to talk to station staff about the local cultural sites and what it was like to collaborate with an artist at work.'

Working alongside McDonald, artist Jessie Brennan has developed Impossible Buildings: Interpreting Place, a project with London Underground staff and students from The Charter School that explores the station's architecture and the local environment through activities based on looking, drawing and making.

This has resulted in a special leaflet available from the station.

Louise Coysh, Community Projects Curator for Art on the Underground, said: It was very exciting to see Jessie and Peter each create works which engage with the people who populate the station each day. 

'By referencing the galleries and cultural spaces nearby Peter celebrates London Underground's pioneering artistic heritage which has often celebrated the city's cultural sites in iconic posters.'



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