Author: window135

'window135' 135 New Cross Road since 2004. Tim Jones & Meena Chodha the exhibit changes weekly.

Brushes…@felixtooth

brass
steel
polished suede
saw blade
horse hair
rotary sweeper bristles

Magnificent.

Many thanks to @felixtooth for the work.
Much appreciated ❤️

@markbeldan & @coralidance…19.07.25

Many thanks to @sarahmkarchdeacon and the dancers Corali Dance Company for the performance on 19.07.25.

There is a clip from the first rehearsal available to see on instagram @window135. Please do watch it. Flowers by @markbeldan

Bethan, Cherie, DJ & Sasha rehearsed with Tim window135 playing the piano.

A wonderful day!

Thank you to all involved and to those that came to the event.

‘Loverose Way’ @markbeldan…10.07.25

‘Loverose Way’ @markbeldan.

‘Earlier this year I was at Bow Arts’ Project Space ‘The Lounge” in Euston.

During my time there, I made gouache-on-cardboard flowers for Corali’s dance performance ‘Phantasia’.

Spending time in the area, I kept noticing how plants and animals could pop-up in unexpected places in Central London.

Loverose Way @window135 features pieces from the performance and a few new works prompted by my time in NW1′

ikabana…the greats on paper on tin

20.06.25

‘new islands are formed everyday…’ this is a first pass at a return to the 1M deep window135

28.06.25

a painting can do absurd things

in support of the piano leg…a piano leg fanfare. 08.06.25

‘the interior of the crater of kirunga-cha-gongo…it is generally too hot to walk upon.’ 2025

others had titles torn from a book bought in Deptford Market…not this one. Until now…28.05.25

‘materials that tether us to ancient rites’

Week 2…18-25.05.25 @victoriakinglondon

The earth speaks through ancient minerals- Malachite from the Great Orme in Wales; Cassiterite from Polberro mine in St. Agnes, Cornwall-once vital to the Bronze Age.

In resonance with the previous week, a fairy ring appears…a circle of fungi & folklore, forming a talisman that invites us across a threshold into ancient magic.’

Malachite, Cassiterite and bronze fairy ring on Sapele plinths; geological map from 1820.

Many thanks to Victoria for the work…and the material investigations.