8 HOLLAND STREET | SOUTH OF THE RIVER: A special project for London Craft Week 2026 extending until 13 June.

11 May - 13 June 2026 
Overview

8 Holland Street is excited to launch 8 HOLLAND STREET | SOUTH OF THE RIVER. Spread across two townhouses on Kennington Lane SE11, the ambitious project presents a new design destination for spring, showcasing six diverse exhibitions spanning sculpture, textile, ceramic, print, furniture and design.

 

In this unique setting, the artists and exhibitions on view explore the psychology of the home, domestic objects, and their occupants. 

 

8 Holland Street | South of The River - London Craft Week 2026 Opening Party

Tuesday 12 May 6 - 9pm

Location: 243 / 245 Kennington Lane, London, SE11 

 

London Craft Week:

Monday 11 - Saturday 16 May: 10am - 6pm

Sunday 17 May: 11am - 4pm

 

Extending from May 21 - June 13: 

Thursday - Saturday: 10am - 6pm

Sunday: 11am - 4pm

 

Exhibitions Overview:

 

FOREST + FOUND: THE HOUSE IS FULL OF GHOSTS

The exhibition The House is Full of Ghosts brings together artists Max Bainbridge and Abigail Booth of studio collective Forest + Found in an unflinching yet tender exploration of the psychology of the domestic house. Their works inhabit the architecture of rooms at once familiar in their proportions yet disquieted by the absence of their inhabitants. Exploring the interplay between embodiment and erasure across permanent and transient states of being, the artists draw on accumulations of familial memory, domestic labour and the passing of time through shared histories of objects and materials.

 

Event

Abigail Booth - In conversation with Ferren Gipson

Saturday 16 May 3.30 - 4.30pm 

 

FRANCES PINNOCK: REPOSE

Alongside Forest + Found, Frances Pinnock presents Repose, a room of intimate works that appear as held notes and gestures, continuing the artist’s enquiry into sculpture as it exists both as performance and private archive. These uncanny arrangements pose objects and materials in states of tension and rest, and explore transformation and distortion in relation to material, perception, and memory. 

 

NICOLA TASSIE: THE HEARTH

The Hearth presents a group of ceramic works that explore the conceptual and material richness of pots in the domestic arena and their role in sustaining the rituals and bonds of social life. Shown alongside other sculptural work showcasing Nicola’s study of texture, line & form, the exhibition alludes to both the domestic and the minimal. 

 

LIORAH TCHIPROUT: FROM THE ARCHIVE

From The Archive brings together a series of etchings and monoprints drawn from an intimate body of works on paper that explore memory, the domestic, and the imagined interior world. Presented as fragments from an evolving archive, the exhibition highlights Tchiprout’s distinctive visual language, where scale, repetition, and gesture create a sense of quiet, personal narratives. Her figurative works, both fantastical and intimate, are informed by Yiddish literature and the artist’s Jewish culture, with her self-referential dolls remaining central to her practice.

 

WONDERING PEOPLE: LOVERS’ COURT

For London Craft Week, Wondering People brings together six artist couples, twelve artists in total, for a six-week residency as part of 8 HOLLAND STREET | SOUTH OF THE RIVER on Kennington Lane. Titled Lovers' Court, the exhibition reflects both the personal and creative partnerships of the participating artists, presenting works across a contrasting range of materials, from wool and felt to porcelain and steel. The works draw on themes of history, chivalry and connection.

 

The exhibiting artists are Ana Naskidashvili and Frederik Poisquet of Morevi Studio, Andrew Pierce Scott and Natalia Triantafylli, Hollie Bowden and Byron Pritchard, Joseph Dupré and Pollyanna Johnson, and Uroš Kotlajić and Tamara Šuškić of Yrhes.

 

FURNITURE AS FORM: 8 HOLLAND STREET & PALEFIRE STUDIO
An edit of 8 Holland Street's collection of Twentieth Century furniture and design including pieces by Mario Ceroli, Ettore Sottsass, Vico Magistretti and Charlotte Perriand. Alongside this, Palefire Studio showcase highlights from their lighting collection which draws on the spirit of artistic movements from Abstract Expressionism to mid-century Murano glass-making.

Works