Current Displays

STREET DREAMS

by Clink Street Ceramics

April - August 2024

Clink Street Ceramics was established in Clink Street in 2014. This cobbled street is at the centre of London’s South Bank - a stretch of roads and pathways along the southern side of the River Thames. The South Bank has over the past 40+ years become the beating heart of the UK skateboarding scene - the Undercroft at the South Bank Centre has become the most famous skate park in the country, with a love hate relationship between the building’s owners and skateboarders.

This project, Street Dreams, aims to document and celebrate some of the everyday moments of skateboarding history through a series of ceramic artworks. Skateboarding saw significant changes during the 1980s and 90s, and this project focuses on skateboarding journalism during this vibrant and formative period. The ceramic pieces are all one-off artworks designed and made by studio potter James Sims. They are hand thrown from a variety of clay bodies and use geometric shapes inspired by the curves of skateparks and street ledges, rails, and steps. Through in depth research into 1980s and 90s skateboarding magazines, a series of ceramic transfers are used to celebrate these everyday moments often lost from documented skateboarding history.

Previous Displays

ARTEFACTS

Valerie McLean

10th January - 13th March 2024

Valerie McLean’s work is inspired by the  Mediterranean landscapes of her childhood: stone villages, crumbling castles, medieval churches and archaeological sites. She is fascinated by the lives witnessed by these old walls, the stories sometimes left untold, sometimes pieced back together from fragments. Through her work, Valerie examines questions about identity, searching for roots and connections, looking at surfaces and finding hidden structures

Instagram: @valeriemcleanceramicartist

Photo Credit: @Valerie_Bernardini_

Our display space on Clink Street is one of London’s only public art displays dedicated to the exhibition of pottery and ceramics. We show our own work as well as displays by guest artists. We host a number of guest displays each year, that tell many stories of craft and making. A vertical volume which may be conceived as a public room, it is a welcoming and inclusive space that has been designed with collaboration in mind.

Guest Displays

We aim to host a revolving programme of displays by guest ceramic artists throughout the year. Our display space is seen by thousands of people every day walking along the Thames Path. If you are a ceramic artist and are interested in exhibiting your work at our display space please get in touch with us. It is entirely free and we welcome enquiries from artists working across all styles and mediums.