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Again, thank you all for such a fantastic exhibition. Stay tuned for news about the catalogue and more!!!
(Fotos by Carolina Faruolo)
Thank you to all of you who showed up last night! It was a complete success. We will be taking the works down tonight, but you will hear back from us soon!!
Julie Impens is a French jewellery designer based in London who graduated from Central Saint Martins in 2010.
Her work is deeply connected to her origin. Her inspiration comes from the French culture and her passion for the eighteenth century. Her jewellery is a way for her to refer to the nostalgia of a time of great leisure and which had a great cultural impact, a time when life was simply different and when France established itself as a cultural examplar.
Fabio Lattanzi Antinori and Alicja Pytlewska both live and work in London.
‘We are all here to do what we are all here to do’ has represented their first collaboration, which is a research that revolves around around the world of myths and fairytales in our contemporary age.
The concept of the artwork focuses on the relationship which exists between reality and dream and it aims to blur the limits of the liminal zone that divides these two forms of experience; the clean and acceptable so-called ‘concrete reality’ and the dark, ethereal often thought of as non-real dimension of dreams, where our unconscious is king. Divided in between the tension of desire and fear, dream or reality, a mysterious character - a forgotten idol - generated by the leftover memories of our social unconscious, wanders in search of an identity to belong to.
For more information about their works and projects, please visit:
The Leftover Show is happy to have such generous friends. The last update is the incorporation of a DJ set on the night of the opening by Coco Capitan and Roberto Piqueras! Another strong reason to not miss it!
Today, we picked up our promotional postcards and posters, sponsored by Urchin Press and printed at Calverts.
Urchin Press is a workgroup for innovation in publishing, publication support and research purposes. Together with #3 and Good Weird, The Leftover Show is proud to be one of Urchin Press´partner projects.
For more information, please visit their website or check their blog!
The Leftover Show gets a small mention in Creative Review’s daily feed. Looking good guys! Stay tuned for artists updates and news about our development.
Begona Martin was born in Cadiz, although she is currently based in South London.
She holds an MA in Photography from the LCC and has exhibited work in London, Winchester and in Southern Spain.
For more information about her or her multidisciplinary projects, please visit:
Pepe Cortines was born in Seville (Spain) in 1982, where he also completed his studies in Architecture at E.T.S.A.S .Universidad de Sevilla (Spain) in june of 2011.
He devotes himself to experimentations in the art field with a special interest in architectural heritage conservation and regenerating/lanscape architecture, as well as realizing architectural designs in different scales, activities like visual artist, 3d visualizer or individual and collective drawing exhibitions.
For more information, please visit his Cargo page:
Louise Ryberg is a London-based graphic designer.
When she is doing self-committed work, it focuses on critical design where she creates design objects with a strong message.
Louise holds a BA from The Royal Danish Design Academy and a MA from London College of Communications. Louise was acknowledged and nominated as a finalist fpr the world’s biggest design awards—the Index: Award in 2009.
For more info, please go to:
Raquel Estrada-Nora is a Spanish-born but London-based photographer.
Her series Not-landscape is an spatial readymade whose elements, re-used urban products, trash found on the land, and signals and barriers delimiting space are traces of the spacial structure which systematize the space, the urban colonization. Countryside has been overtaken by this organized structure, when it´s subject to production it reveals a systematic and parcelled fragmentation. That is why whoever walks through a route on the countryside is consuming a product, whereas on the other hand whoever is crossing a field could turn into a delinquent if he happens to be on private property. Activity for the development of this project stands on abandonment: by creating useless maps, taking everyday life objects out of context and playing with borders.
Please join us at The Leftover Show, a multidisciplinary exhibition showing young work by 20 artists. From photography to installation, the exhibition collects findings or ‘leftovers’ which meant a point of inflexion in the current praxis of the artists. The Leftover show is a concept and event created by Good Weird.
We will be hosting an opening night on December 6th. but will be opened from the 5th- to the 7th. at Alekano Club (London E2 9HS).