The Old Diorama Arts Center has launched the Regent’s Park Estate Story Trail, with 12 specific facilities of the 10 artists and collective site.
These facilities, which include 28 new public works of art, celebrate the culture, ecology and heritage of the farm.
These facilities, which include 28 new public works of art, celebrate the culture, ecology and heritage of the farm. (Image: Old Diorama Arts Center)
The path of history will celebrate the people and places of the property of the 1950s through 11 works of art.
It was planned to start at Stanhope Street, with a map encouraging visitors to find the different works of art.
The second stop is Regent’s Place, Drummond Street, where a teleidoscope and kaleidoscope sculpture created by the artist Alisa Ruzavina is placed.
A similar artist sculpture will also be created in the Cumberland market.
A light projection appears on the floors in Munster Square and Lxton Place, where the shadows of those walking attacks are part of art.
Three chewing sculptures also appear in Munster Square, created by members of the LGBTQ+ local community to celebrate the secret queer bar that was close in the crypt of the basement of St Mary Magdalene in the 1960s.
The path of history has evolved over the years, with contributions from thousands of residents and the collaboration of several organizations. (Image: Old Diorama Arts Center)
A pink light would also shine from a drainage on the pavement outside the church at night from October to December, for a week every month.
Near the fifth work of art of the path will have photos of the Recent’s Park residents are captured by photographer Brendan Barry.
The Pangboune Meadow area, once an antisocial behavior site on the farm, will be the home of a new mural with bright colors and symbols of local wildlife.
The Root sculptures of the AI trees will be placed below near a tree in Clarence Gardens.
The path is a project promoted by the community, with residents that select the locations for each work of art. (Image: Old Diorama Arts Center) These undulating sculptures will seem that the roots of the tree are pushing on the ground.
The path is a project promoted by the community, with residents that select the locations for each work of art.
Daniel Pitt, creative director and executive director of Old Diorama Arts Center, said: “The launch of the Regent’s Park Estate marks four years since the reinvention of Old Diorama Arts Center began.
“Encapsulates everything that is Odac: deeply and ambitiously directed by the community, collaborative and participatory.”
The path of history developed in collaboration with Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London and Camden Council.
Its objective is to promote local pride, security and connection through public works of art.
The curator of the Rukshana Begum neighborhood said: “We are lucky to live here, it’s really like a family.”
The project was initiated by resident Marie, who proposed the idea of discovering more about the area through the Regent’s Park Community Champions.
The path of history has evolved over the years, with contributions from thousands of residents and the collaboration of several organizations. (Image: Old Diorama Arts Center) The project is an answer to the changes that the heritage is experiencing due to the development of HS2 and the widest area of Euston.
Councilor Adam Harrison, attached leader of the Camden Council and member of the Cabinet for Planning and a Sustainable Camden, said: “The path of history is a fantastic example of what we can achieve when we empower communities to shape where they live.
“He has taken advantage of the richness of creativity, imagination and pride of the property of the Regent Park, and rightly celebrates heritage as a place where creativity, culture and community continue to thrive.”