Habitat: Degree 51N/-0E
13 June 2024–07 September 2024, 12:30 pm–4:00 pm
A collaborative installation by artist Suzy Round and UCL lecturer Michael Hrebeniak. Taking its name from the coordinates of the lost Manor Gardens allotments, located half a mile from UCL East, the installation has been co-designed with local children, who have also planted and tended its miniature allotment.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Matilda Blackwell – UCL East Cultural and Community Engagement
Location
-
Marshgate7 Sidings StreetLondonE20 2AEUnited Kingdom
Habitat: Degree 51N/-0E is a collaboration between artist Suzy Round and UCL researcher Michael Hrebeniak, supported by UCL East Cultural and Community Engagement.
This installation takes its name from the geographic coordinates of the lost Manor Gardens allotments, located half a mile from UCL East. The area had a hidden rural character unique to an otherwise industrialised terrain, enhanced by wild hedgerows and plum trees along the banks of the tidal Lea. It was notable, too, for the unique vernacular architecture of its buildings improvised out of the junked materials of the bombed East End.
Our shanty assemblage has been co-designed with local children from St Winefride’s Catholic Primary School and the Little Manor Play Project. They have also planted and tended its miniature allotment, which symbolically reinstates the memory of Manor Gardens and its international and intergenerational transmission of growing cultures.
In common with standard allotment practices, it is constructed from recovered waste materials. It is scruffy and makeshift; a horticultural slum, perhaps. But by late-summer it should be over-brimm’d with swollen fruits and ripened vegetables
Join us for a self-guided visit to Suzy and Michael's art installation - bring your book, bring your lunch, or just enjoy the installation in the sunshine!
Open to the public on Thuesday afternoons.
Please note, the film can't be projected in the rain. You can still visit the installation, though you might get wet!