Following the closure of Londonewcastles original project space in Shoreditch, after a successful eight years, the new and more intimate Gallery 46 has opened in Summer 2016.
46 Ashfield Street, London, E1 2AJ
Gallery 46 in Whitechapel is our new sister gallery to be used as Londonewcastle Project Space. The new space, established through the partnership of Martin J Tickner and Sean McLusky and Fruitmachine founders, Martin Bell & Wai Hung Young breaks fresh ground for the open-source, non-conformist curatorial approach Tickner and McLusky employed at their (rightly) notorious MEN Gallery, in Shoreditch.Housed in a pair of newly renovated Georgian houses in the grounds of Whitechapel Hospital, GALLERY 46 is set over 3 floors and 8 rooms and is a kaleidoscopic addition to Whitechapel’s burgeoning gallery scene and close by its artistic...
→Shoreditch, London
Our Street Art Programme is about turning over large canvases on buildings under our control - during planning and development – to artists, from the internationally renowned to the completely unknown. If you’d like Londonewcastle to showcase your work, contact us...
→Acclaimed international graffiti artist Replete has completed an ambitious work on the front façade of Londonewcastle Depot.
[Replete][1] spent ten years working in the computer games industry as an artist and animator, including the home versions of Streetfighter 2, Road Rash and Alien 3. He then progressed to various art/music projects with artists Coldcut and their record label Ninja Tune.
For over 15 years he has been experimenting with Graffiti in all it's forms, including aerosol, hand painted, sculpted and animated. He's one of the artists featured in the best sites category, amongst the likes of Banksy, Daim and Seak on [www.artcrimes.org][2] the official and most respected Graffiti site in the world.
He has had many successful exhibitions at galleries based in Leeds, London, Manchester and Barcelona, with his paintings selling around the world, from New York to Sydney.
[1]: http://www.repletes.net
[2]: http://www.artcrimes.org