Exhibition
21st Century Slum: Life, Loss and Resistance in North Kensington
7 May 2026 – 30 May 2026
Regular hours
- Thursday
- 18:00 – 21:00
- Friday
- 14:00 – 18:00
- Saturday
- 12:00 – 16:00
Free admission
Address
- Morley College
- Wornington Road
- London
England - W10 5QQ
- United Kingdom
A landmark exhibition that explores the lived experience of North Kensington communities navigating gentrification, the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire, and the "architectural disaster" of managed urban decline.
About
“Architectural Disaster” or Home? New Art Exhibition Challenges the “21st Century Slum” Label in North Kensington
In 1976, a local planning officer admitted that regeneration in North Kensington was creating a “21st century slum.” Fifty years later, a landmark exhibition at Morley Gallery North Kensington confronts this legacy, reframing the narrative through the eyes of the community that refused to be managed into decline.
Running from May 7th to May 30th, 2026, 21st Century Slum: Life, Loss, and Resistance in North Kensington brings together the work of documentary artist Kevin Percival and BAFTA-winning filmmaker Constantine Gras. Together, they offer an intimate, "insider" record of the Wornington Green, Silchester, and Lancaster West estates—the latter being the site of the Grenfell Tower tragedy.
Art as Witness
The exhibition captures a community navigating sixteen years of demolition, displacement and resettlement. While new "Portobello Square" flats on the former Wornington Green estate now command prices of £700,000, Percival and Gras document the human cost and the enduring spirit of those left behind.
- Kevin Percival, a former housing co-op member on the Wornington Green estate and photographer for the V&A and Science Museum, presents a decade of photography. His work blends tender portraits of neighbours with stark records of a changing environment. "I saw the strength of neighbours who looked out for one another in a system that didn't hear them," says Percival.
- Constantine Gras, a former V&A Museum Community Artist in Residence, contributes 15 years of creative activism. The show features the first-ever screening of his 2018 film, Strawberries are for the Future, which follows a community gardener rebuilding life from the debris of the Grenfell fire.
A Record of Resilience
From residents protesting the loss of 200 local trees to voices ignored before the 2017 fire, the exhibition is a powerful testament to survival.
"In a borough where green space and affordable living are under threat, these works are an essential record of resilience," says Gras.