Brixton street to host stories of 2020

street scene
Images on Dalberg Road

Brixton’s Dalberg Road will soon be home to an art installation celebrating the ordinary and extraordinary stories of local people.

It is part of a wider project ”From where I’m Standing” by the locally based Empathy Museum, made with the support of NHS England.

Its online photography and audio installation will tell diverse stories from people around the UK as a record of life in 2020.

It will be available online from Thursday (10 December) and in Dalberg Road, where physical photographs will be displayed alongside QR codes giving access to audio interviews, first in London and then around the UK.

From Where I’m Standing is made up of 34 portraits, each accompanied by an audio story and a photograph of an object that reflects life in 2020 for the individual.

Spanning the length of England from Truro to Harrogate, the stories include nurses and doctors, an imam working in the Nightingale, an undertaker, a rapper, the director of longterm planning for the NHS, checkout staff and a care home entertainer who secured the job to see her dad.

Local people who feature include:

Avi – nominated for being a fantastic next door neighbour

Bravo (Blog image)

Bravo – nominated for running Tumbles Laundrette on Railton Road

Dermot – nominated for producing lots of visors/face masks at South London Makerspace in Herne Hill

Charlene – nominated for her role at Pavilion Pharmacy, Brixton

Kate – nominated for the work of Brockwell Park Greenhouses 

Jenny – nominated for her work on the till at Sainsbury’s

Natalie – nominated for her work heading up the House Gospel Choir

All images are by local local photographer Amit Lennon.

Challenging times

Intended to create a museum archive of the period – recording in real time what will become a key historical period of the 21st century – From where I’m Standing looks at what the pandemic has to teach us about empathy as well as exploring resilience, wellbeing, interdependence and what sustains us during challenging times.

The project has four strands shot by four award-winning photographers:

  • ten stories from frontline health, social care and public health professionals, collected in collaboration with NHS England and the Health Foundation shot by Myah Jeffers;
  • ten from nursing and midwifery shot by Lottie Davies;
  • seven exploring diversity of experience in lockdown such as new parents and students by Tim Mitchell;
  • seven celebrating local heroes mentioned above by local photographer Amit Lennon.

Through other people’s eyes

The Empathy Museum creates immersive projects that help audiences to look at the world through other people’s eyes.

Its work is built around the model of an alternative High Street, where each project takes the form of a shop where visitors are invited for a human interaction rather than a consumer experience.

So far they have created a shoe shop – the award- winning A Mile in My Shoes, which had 50,000 visitors – and a crowd-sourced library, 1001 Books.

From Where I’m Standing continues the journey along the High Street in Brixton – as an estate agents from 10 December.

Photographs and QR codes will be installed on “for sale” signs along Dalberg Road. There are plans for further street installations around the UK.

Moved to tears

Clare Patey, Empathy Museum founder, said: “In a world rife with division and in the midst of a pandemic, listening to these storytellers, with all the wisdom, kindness and generosity of spirit that they share, has inspired me, moved me to tears at times and ultimately given me a renewed faith in humanity.”

Ruth May, Chief Nursing Officer for England, said: “The inspirational stories that have been brought together here show how important it is to understand what it is like to see the world from another point of view.

“Nurses and midwives are far more than their job or uniform and this piece of work will help them be seen as resilient, independent people.”

Photographers

Amit Lennon specialises in intimate portraits. His work encompasses subjects as diverse as UK prison reform, coal mining in the arctic, stargazing in Chile’s Atacama Desert, or remaking the FA Cup. The National Portrait Gallery purchased his portrait of DJ John Peel for its permanent collection.

Lottie Davies is a BAFTA-nominated travel, editorial and fine art photographer. Who has won many awards including awards Association of Photographers’ Awards, the International Color Awards, and the Schweppes Photographic Portrait Awards. 

Myah Jeffers is a Barbadian-British documentary and portrait photographer, dramaturg and director. She is currently the Literary Associate at The Royal Court and the 2019 Portrait of Britain winner. Her work is focused on Black experiences and aims to use portraiture to illuminate Black and queer joy as acts of resistance.

Tim Mitchell is a widely published photographic artist and educator who has staged major exhibitions at the Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art, Derby Museums, Horniman Museum, Brixton’s Photofusion, Museum of Arts and Crafts Hamburg, Cambridge Sustainability Residency and PhotoEast and has work currently touring Europe.


The project is supported by Arts Council England, NHS England and the Health Foundation.

The Empathy Museum is currently developing Sound Salon, an interactive hairdressers exploring hair and identity and will open a physical space later this year (social distance permitting).