Gallery artists, Andrew Pierre Hart, to particiapte in the group show Dub Inna Babylon at Harlesden High Street, as part of the Brent Biennial 2022.
Harlesden High Street presents Dub Inna Babylon, a group exhibition reflecting on the cultural and aesthetic legacies of music in Harlesden. Featuring works by Mattia Guarnera-MacCarthy, Ocean Loren-Baulcombe Toppin, Paulette Coke, Andre Morgan, Amanda Ali, Andrew Pierre Hart, Ruby Eve Dickson and Anna Sebastian.
Inspired in part by Harlesden High Street’s neighbour, Hawkeye Records Store, an iconic music venue marking its 45th year on the high street this year, the exhibition will take the site as a starting point to celebrate the history of Harlesden as a microcosm for Black music, and a space where various Afro-Caribbean diasporic communities have made home.
Located just around the corner from Harlesden High Street, Hawkeye comprises a record store and bakery, paralleling the gallery’s twinning with a bakery of its own. The exhibition transforms the gallery into a re-imagined record store from the perspectives of artists living and working in the borough. The two sites become tethered, and Harlesden High Street becomes the embodiment of the contemporary afterlives of Reggae and Black music more broadly in Harlesden, as a result of spaces like Hawkeye. The exhibition celebrates the ways in which music culture was and is a means for making home, and for finding community and connection across cultures and generations.
July 21, 2022