Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Sun Ra, Prince and Shaka in Brockley Road

Some musical legends commemorated at Lorenzo's Records Wanted shop at 260a Brockley Road, the mural painted in 2023 by Butch Attai. Those featured include Jah Shaka, Prince, Ennio Morricone, Sun Ra, Yukihiro Takahashi and Holger Czukay. Some stuff for the real heads there and an indication of the kind of music you can find inside. Just down the road from the Roy Ayers mural too - can any other street in the world boast such a line up?



Someone has defaced Sun Ra (heresy), but found earlier image at Lorenzo's instagram


The  artist has also posted their original sketch for the piece


Jah Shaka from New Cross of course some of the others may have passed briefly through South London. Sun Ra's first London gig was at the South Bank centre (Queen Elizabeth Hall) in 1970 and of course there was Prince's 2007 residency at the 02 in Greenwich.
 

Friday, April 18, 2025

South London Street Signs

 Time for another round up of messages from the streets, lampposts and toilet doors of South London, most of these spotted around New Cross/Brockley/Nunhead in last 6 months.

Unequivocal Safe Space statement in Old Nun's Head.


New Cross, near to Goldsmiths (painted mural)

Robert Smith of The Cure in Dash the Henge record shop in Camberwell
 - 'Charlotte Sometimes, Always Anti-Fascist'

Dash the Henge - 'Millwall Communist Party'

Insurrectionary anarchists busy in Deptford, next to tunnel to Fordham Park SE14 'TFL raise fares... let's raise hell'

'Brockley Anarchist Reading Club' meeting up at Skehans

'Free Luigi Mangione' in Camberwell

Toilet doors in the New Cross Inn always a treasure trove of sticker art:



Only Tears on Old Kent Road

SE15SK8 sticker on Gellatly Road sign, SE14

Palestine still rightly getting attention - these stickers proclaiming 'long live Gaza' and 'Free Palestine'-




'Free like only animals can be' - spottted on a car in Nunhead


Reclaim the Streets/Critical Mass - advertising planned event in May 2025

Lots more posts about this kind of stuff

Saturday, April 05, 2025

Farewell to Andrew Logan's Glasshouse SE1

Sad to see the demolition of the Glasshouse in Melior Place SE1 (opposite the Horseshoe Inn), home to the artist Andrew Logan and his architect partner Michael Davis for many years. When they moved in in the late 1980s the site 'contained a concrete garage with a flat on top. A year later, inspired by a trip to Mexico, Davis added another floor and painted it pink. He put stairs on the outside, cut windows in the front and installed the glass roof, resulting in the huge, conservatory-like studio' (Guardian, 2008).

I went there once, with Logan giving tours as part of an Open House event. The place was joyously crammed with his sparkling mirror art work. The writing was on the wall once planning permission was granted for a block of flats  overlooking it. Who wants to live in a glasshouse when everybody can look into it from above? Logan moved out a few years ago, there was an art gallery there for a while but now it is gone for good (or bad).

Demolition site

How it used to be

The conservatory from above

Peak glasshouse

Logan can still sometimes be spotted cycling around the area, a queer legend famed for his Alternative Miss World parties and other events when he was living at Butlers Wharf in the 1970s. His warehouse space there was used for an orgy scene in Derek Jarman's film Sebastiene.

In an interview with World People Project a few years ago Logan said:  'I feel London is now in the grip of developers who are fuelled by greed. The face of London is quickly changing, a futuristic megatropolis is being built and the gap between the rich and poor is widening. Through all the changes the River Thames continues to flow.

In this particular case the issue is perhaps less gentrification - I don't think Logan was priced out - than the blandification of parts of London with more and more identikit blocks squeezing out anything quirky, interesting or unique.