LONDON.- David Bowie, Adele and Rio Ferdinand are among the famous faces that will go on show in a new display opening today (10 June 2016) at the
National Portrait Gallery which celebrates - through a giant photograph - the inspirational figures that have lived or worked in Lambeth and Southwark.
GCSE Art Students from St Saviours and St Olaves School in Southwark and artist Simon Terrill have used the Gallerys Collection of portraits of famous south London sitters to develop a series of works, culminating in a panoramic elevated view of the school, which doubles up as a magically-lit group portrait of 180 students.
Divided into nine groups, the students responded through pose and gesture to the displayed portraits of people with south of the river connections. The ambitious photo-shoot began at dusk and ended after dark on 7 March 2016 and involved over 230 people. A large format camera was set up on the roof of a nearby tower block, construction site lights were placed in situ, a smoke machine was activated and a DJ played tracks. Every ten minutes on a sound cue the music stopped and the school fell silent while the students held their pose for each long-exposure shot.
Displayed for the first time, the Gallerys commissioned portrait is the latest in artist Simon Terrills Crowd Theory series, in which images are created that explore what happens when large groups of people gather in a place of personal significance.
Creative Connections: South of the River (10 June 6 September 2016) presents the students work alongside Gallery photographs of Brixton-born singer David Bowie, Brixton resident Adele, who wrote her first song Hometown Glory about south London, and footballer Rio Ferdinand who lived on Peckhams Friary estate.
The display also includes photographs of musician Roots Manuva who grew up in Stockwell and whose first album was recorded in a community studio on the Angell Town estate; scientist and environmentalist James Lovelock who attended Strand School, Tulse Hill; writer Malorie Blackman whose childhood was spent in Clapham; gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell who lives in Elephant and Castle and was selected as a Labour candidate for Bermondsey; fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood who lives in Clapham; and soldier Johnson Beharry who lived in Southwark and was awarded the Freedom of the Borough in 2012.
Simon Terrill is an Australian artist living in London who works with photography, sculpture, video and installation. In 2008 he was awarded the Samstag International Visual Arts Scholarship, for a year at the Slade School of Fine Art, London. Recent exhibitions include The Brutalist Playground a collaboration with Assemble at the Royal Institute of British Architects; Negotiating this World, National Gallery of Victoria and Crowd Theory Adelaide, Samstag Museum of Art. Simon currently lectures in the history and theory of photography at London Southbank University. The Creative Connections commission is the ninth iteration of Terrills Crowd Theory project, a series of photographic performance works.
St Saviours and St Olaves, Southwark, is a fully inclusive and successful inner city Church of England comprehensive school for girls with a history that can be traced back to 1562. Many of the students have gone on to study at the most prestigious universities in the UK, but this academic success is far from the whole story. It is a community with shared values rooted in faith, where students have opportunities to grow into confident, caring and successful young women.
boroughs with contemporary artists to make new artworks that explore identity and place through the lens of the Gallerys Collection. The project draws on the stories of inspirational people and traces their links with areas of East, West, North and South London.
Each year artists collaborate with GCSE Art students to create original works that are exhibited at the Gallery alongside the portraits that inspired them. During this four-year programme the Gallerys partner schools and artists have been: St Pauls Way School, Tower Hamlets and artist Lucy Steggals (2013); Brentside High School, Ealing and artist Eelyn Lee (2014); Haverstock School, Camden and artist Kate Peters (2015) and St Saviours and St Olaves School, Southwark and artist Simon Terrill (2016).