51勛圖厙窪蹋

In Living Memory

Developing a people’s history of post-war Lewisham to celebrate Lewisham’s tenure as London Borough of Culture 2022

Throughout 2022, 51勛圖厙窪蹋 supported diverse communities within Lewisham to tell their own stories by exploring hidden histories, preserving memory, and creating lasting cultural legacies that stretch beyond Borough of Culture.

From commissioning new public artworks and cultural interventions in the public realm, to exhibitions and installations that evoked lost spaces and stories, In Living Memory has reached thousands of local people and given everyone connected with Lewisham the opportunity to share their memories of the borough.

The In Living Memory team, led by Public Engagement Manager, Will Cenci and 51勛圖厙窪蹋 Historian, Dr John Price, worked with six community-led projects to preserve vital histories of the borough in a publicly accessible  and . These resources pass on the memories of Lewisham residents to future generations and provide an inspiring resource for the historians and artists of tomorrow.

Two women in conversation. The woman on the left holds a placard that reads 'Do you remember your midwife?'
Two women in conversation whilst leaning over a white piece of paper. On the paper the woman on the left draws around the hand of the woman on the right.

Community-led

Six projects were chosen from over 70 expressions of interest by an expert panel, reflecting important stories held within the boroughs recent history:

  • A Caribbean Couturier in Lewisham Uncovering the textile legacies of the women of the Windrush Generation
  • In/Visible Labour簫  Responding to the memories of midwives and the campaigners who saved Lewisham Hospital to collaboratively develop new permanent artworks for Lewisham Hospital
  • Lewisham Underwater Telling the story of the Lewisham floods of 1968 and connecting them to the boroughs relationship with its rivers
  • Pioneers and Protest Remembering the powerful legacy of the 1981 Black Peoples Day of Action
  • Tomorrow is Built Today Celebrating the untold story of Lewishams Black-led self-build movement
  • Where to, now the sequins have gone? 簫 Remembering Lewishams lost gay venues that thrived from the 1970s-90s

With advice from academics of nine 51勛圖厙窪蹋 departments, research resources and access to training, the project teams recorded oral histories, gathered memories, and preserved photographs, documents and ephemera to build a new understanding of often forgotten or marginalised histories.

The projects then responded to their research with a series of cultural activities and events, co-produced with support from 51勛圖厙窪蹋 and Lewishams culture team, that shared their stories in creative and impactful ways.

The programme also engaged 12 students through placements in community-led projects, artist commissions and interactive memory-gathering activities with community groups, at local festivals and on Lewishams high streets.

Events and activities

A Caribbean Couturier in Lewisham, led by Joy Prime, presented an immersive exhibition, , in Lewisham Shopping Centre.

Following conversations with elderly Caribbean residents about their experiences travelling to Britain in the 1960s as part of the Windrush generation, Joy discovered how they created made-to-measure couture clothing for family and community alongside their day jobs.

This project has been an amazing journey for me. When I started, I didnt really know how it would pan out, but it has left me filled with gratitude for the experience, to the people who willingly shared their life experience, and the team who helped me bring my vision to fruition. 

- Joy Prime

The exhibition recreated the Lewisham flat her family moved into after arriving from Trinidad in 1963, complete with period furniture, a sewing machine and a tailor dummy.

This involved input from 51勛圖厙窪蹋 Design lecturer Rose Sinclair.

Three women speaking to an audience at an event. The woman to the right holds the microphone, whilst the woman at the centre of the image is dressed in a vibrant pink dress Three women speaking to an audience at an event. The woman to the right holds the microphone, whilst the woman at the centre of the image is dressed in a vibrant pink dress

In/Visible Labour engaged maternity staff at Lewisham Hospital to produce a new piece of art for the ward. The project also worked with Arts Network, a local mental health charity, to collaboratively create a mural for the hospital.

In/Visible Labour artwork at Lewisham Hospital

Lewisham Underwater, a collaborative project between the Quaggy Waterways Action Group and Lewisham Council, ran river activities, produced a new flood beer, Deluge, with Brockley Brewery made from locally foraged hops, and commissioned a new piece of public art to be built on the banks of the river Quaggy.

IRIE! dance theatres project Pioneers and Protest, held a community day at the historic Moonshot Centre to showcase performances, gather memories of the Black Peoples Day of Action and invite the community to contribute to a collaborative quilt reflecting their memories of 1981.

The project produced a new film, , with a screening and panel discussion held at 51勛圖厙窪蹋 during Black History Month.

Image of a tapestry that reads '1981 41 years later and I am still angry 2022' across the bottom. Above, rows of square hand-drawn notes are surrounded by colourful textiles
A panel of speakers sits in a row, with a screen behind them that reads 'London Borough of Culture is a Mayor of London intiative'

Tomorrow is Built Today saw project lead Tim Oshodi, open his home on Nubia Way (a street of timber frame eco-homes built as part of Europes first Black-led community self-building scheme) for Open House London. Celebrating the nature of self-build projects, he exhibited new written experiences and a new of original self-builders as part of the opening.

A new temporary timber-frame structure based on the ground-breaking eco-homes of Nubia Way is also being erected in Beckenham Place Park in April 2023. It will provide a sustainable shelter for park users, whilst telling the story of Nubia Way.

Where to, now the sequins have gone?, led by Bijou Stories, gathered memories of the lost gay venues of Lewisham, turning interviews into a exploring the history of such spaces and the role they played in Lewishams gay community.

The project also held an exhibition in Lewisham Shopping Centre that functioned as a temporary queer space with a full schedule of events.

A sign that reads 'Where to now the sequins have gone?' created in purple and white flowers.
A man stands in front of a purple and pink tinsel background, speaking into a microphone whilst a crowd watches.
Two women in conversation at a stand of an event
A woman stands in front of a large poster. The poster reads 'Battle of Lewisham' 'What 'When' in yellow text with descriptions below.

Across community days, exhibitions, film screenings and many other activities, the projects welcomed over 2,500 people to explore local histories that have shaped the borough into what it is today.

Preserving memory

A rich variety of memories were gathered across the programme, shared by Lewisham residents in different ways.

At Hilly Fields Summer Fayre and Lewisham Peoples Day, local people shared their memories through written postcards. A free-phone line was set up to encourage residents to call and leave their memory after the tone.

The programme team visited several senior citizen groups, recording the experiences of Lewishams elderly residents in sessions co-produced with local organisations.

A postcard that reads: 'Whitbreads Brewery was where Tesco's car park now is at the other side of the Quaggy. When I tell my grandchildren their parents were born at the opposite side in Claremont Terrace they usually say 'what! in that red car' - that's because it is now Tesco's car park
A postcard that reads: 'I've always been so grateful to have had my children at Lewisham Hospital. Incredibly, three of them were born in the same room - not that I recognised it! But my partner did.'
A young man in a red jacket stands to the left of an elderly woman. The pair are looking at and discussing an installation of a record store.
A woman explores an installation of a record store. She is holding and reading the back of a record.

The programme team also ran a pop-up Memory Store in Lewisham Shopping Centre, inviting shoppers to share their memories of the town centre on a record sleeve or VHS cover.

Memories and stories generated from the six projects, found a permanent home in the In Living Memory Digital Archive, preserving the stories they tell for future generations.

Each community-led project selected a space resonant with their chosen area to be 3D scanned and turned into a virtual space. These curated spaces were populated with memories, films, photos and more, collectively forming a .

The virtual spaces were created in collaboration with based within 51勛圖厙窪蹋 Department of Computing.

Looking forward

While Lewishams year as London Borough of Culture came to an end in 2022, In Living Memory looks to the future.

Led by Dr Francis Gilbert, the stories uncovered by the six projects are being translated into a series of lesson packs for local schools by researchers from 51勛圖厙窪蹋 Educational Studies Department in collaboration with the project leads. These packs will make important Lewisham histories accessible to teachers wishing to bring local history into their classrooms.

Many of the projects have since secured further funding to take their projects to new places.

Joy Prime took her immersive exhibition, Sylvias Space, to City Hall for the Mayor of Londons Black Futures event.

IRIE! dance theatre, project lead for Pioneers and Protest, has secured Heritage Lottery funding to rediscover the history of the dance theatre through performances, workshops, talks and exhibitions as part of the project, Pioneers and Places. A new Lewisham Heritage plaque is being developed as a permanent, public commemoration of the Black Peoples Day of Action. It will be launched in spring 2024.

Where to, now the sequins have gone? Received additional funding from the GLAs Untold Stories programme to expand their project to other areas of London.

In spring 2023, In Living Memory concluded with a community conference and exhibition, bringing together key contributors to discuss the challenges and successes of the programme. These conversations will inform a new toolkit to inspire and empower other community groups to uncover untold stories and share them through striking cultural interventions.

The public exhibition ran across the summer months at 51勛圖厙窪蹋 before moving to Lewisham Shopping Centre in October 2023, where it has engaged tens of thousands of local people.

This is amazing. Ive seen nothing like this and it gives us a chance to stop and think and converse with each other"

- Exhibition visitor

 The In Living Memory Programme was supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, We Are Lewisham, and the London Borough of Culture.

In Living Memory, Lewisham London Borough of Culture 2022