• Home
  • Projects
    • Growth in the Shadows
    • Blue Haze: Awaba
    • If a coconut falls
    • Monumental as Anything
    • Soil Stories of Coranderrk
    • Shipping Roots
    • Blue Haze
    • Green Hell
    • Fleece Fugitives
    • Nganga toornung-nge dharraga Bunjil
    • Not a Drop to Drink Cartographies
    • Not a Drop to Drink
    • Convivial City
    • North Melbourne School of Displacement
    • The only rock we eat
    • Things I learnt in a hot tub
    • Common Knowledge and Learning Curves
    • Edible stories from the food bowl
    • the earth affords them no food at all
    • Changing Courses
    • Appetite for Construction
    • Abundance: Fruit of the Sea, Bounty of the Mountains
    • Redfern School of Displacement
    • Circular Questioning
    • Preservation
    • Temporary Spaces, Edible Places: New York
    • Temporary Spaces, Edible Places: Vancouver
    • If There’s Something Strange in Your Neighbourhood…
    • Temporary Spaces, Edible Places: Isle of Skye, Scotland
    • Temporary Spaces, Edible Places: London
    • This Must Be The Place
    • Vertical Villages (with ruangrupa)
    • Tropical Thunder
    • Gonflables et amuse-bouches
    • Living Under The Stars
    • Impossible Utopia
    • Emeraldtown: Gary, Indiana
    • ReMake Estate
    • Pemulwuy Dream Team
    • Whatever Floats Your Boat
    • Redfern Waterloo: Tour of Beauty
    • unReal Estate
  • Publications
  • Info
  • News
  • Contact

Open Plan Commission South London Gallery

15 August 2019

Over the London Summer I have been creating a project with kids at South London Gallery’s neighbouring Pelican Estate in Peckham.

“For the South London Gallery’s yearly Open Plan international residency programme, the Sydney-based artist Keg de Souza presents Convivial City. Four site-specific installations have been developed through a series of workshops with local children and families, taking inspiration from aspects of the Reggio Emilia pedagogical philosophy, which encourages child-led learning through touch, listening, observation and movement. Using this approach, children have explored the ways in which they experience the spaces of their housing estate through their own unique language.”

https://www.southlondongallery.org/projects/keg-de-souza-convivial-city/