The City of London Corporation and Hawkins\Brown have announced that Larry Achiampong has been appointed as Artist in Residence for the public realm redevelopment of the historic Smithfield area.
Larry Achiampong was invited to the role following a curatorial process led by the Contemporary Art Society. His work focuses on pop culture, class and colonialism, and has been shown at Tate Modern, Somerset House, the 57th Venice Biennale and the Institute for Creative Arts in Cape Town. His latest work, an audio piece called Sanko-time, is currently part of The Line, London’s free art walk.
In January 2020, the City of London Corporation selected a multidisciplinary design team led by Hawkins\Brown and comprised of landscape architects OKRA, Contemporary Art Society, transport consultant Momentum, and lighting designers Studio Dekka, to draw up proposals for the transformation of the public realm in Smithfield.
The public realm commission anticipates major changes to the area that will create an exciting, welcoming new destination within the Culture Mile.
These include the opening of the Elizabeth Line at Farringdon, the relocation of the Museum of London to former market buildings in the area, and the potential redevelopment of the current market buildings following the proposed relocation of the meat market to Dagenham Dock.
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Larry Achiampong will be embedded in the design team during the next design phase. Achiampong’s role will include his own research into to the area. He will engage with local communities and stakeholders to develop a unique creative response that will inform the permanent design of the civic spaces of Smithfield.
His work will focus particularly on engagement with Black youth and elders in the City and adjacent boroughs to encourage wider representation and new narratives within the design process.
Artist Larry Achiampong said “My role as an Artist in this process puts me in a unique position, using my methodology and practice to inspire the difficult, critical conversations around class, race and gender that affects the whole of society and how it has been built around us.
“By exploring elements of popular culture that relate to the histories in the area, my intention is that this process will create long-lasting and meaningful bonds with communities that may not have existed before.
“I hope this Artist in Residence role will be one of many projects, practices and commitments in an ongoing process to create an enduring legacy that allows the City to feel like home to everyone, particularly those who are mis/underrepresented.”