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Established | 2009 (2009) |
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Location | Studio B4Q, Bussey Building, 133 Rye LaneLondon,England |
Coordinates | 51°28′26″N0°04′11″W / 51.473812°N 0.069673°W /51.473812; -0.069673 |
Director | Emily Druiff |
Public transit access | ![]() |
Website | www |
Peckham Platform (formerly calledPeckham Space) is a public art gallery inLondon that commissions and exhibits work by contemporary artists, usually in collaboration with local community groups.[1]
Peckham Platform was founded in 2009 as an initiative developed by nearbyCamberwell College of Arts to commission location-specific projects by contemporary artists in collaboration with local youth groups.[2] The first brand new, purpose-built, public-funded art gallery in South London since 1891, the building was designed by the architects Penson Group and is located onPeckham Square in thePeckham district ofSouth London.[3] Funders for the new venture, originally called 'Peckham Space', includedArts Council England[4] andSouthwark Council, as well asUAL.[5] In 2013, the gallery became independent from Camberwell College of Arts, changing its name and, through the formation of a board of trustees, established itself as a charitable institution.[6]Peckham Platform's founding director isEmily Druiff, whose earlier career as a curator and artist was focussed on the field of socially engaged art in London.[7]
Since its founding in 2009, Peckham Platform has established a programme of commissioning new work for solo exhibitions by British and international artists. These have included installation artist Gayle Chong Kwan ('Double Vision', in 2012),[8] filmmakersSonia Boyce ('Network' in 2011) and Nikolaj Bendix Skyum Larsen (343 Perspectives in 2012),[9] painterKimathi Donkor (Daddy, I want to be a black artist, in 2013),[10] performance artistJessica Voorsanger (Peckham Heroes, in 2011)[11] and Ruth Beale, whose 2014 show 'Bookbed' helped relaunch the gallery under its new name.[12] All of the gallery's exhibitions have involved artistic collaborations with local community groups and residents, particularly young people – in line with the institution's mission to build creative links between contemporary art and the community.[13]
Integral to Peckham Platform's exhibition programme is its work in public art education. As well as the educational workshops, artist's talks and seminars which are a standard element in the public gallery sector, Peckham Platform is distinctive and innovative in London because of its policy of consistently commissioning artists to make work directly in collaboration with members of the local community, particularly young people facing the challenges of inequality in one of London's most deprived urban areas.[14]
Peckham Platform has charitable status under UK law and is governed by a board of trustees.