Selected Projects London Heritage Quarter
London Heritage Quarter
London, UK

To mark International Women’s Day, a pop-up exhibition
across four workplace lobbies celebrating storytelling,
sustainability, and feminist knowledge-sharing.
across four workplace lobbies celebrating storytelling,
sustainability, and feminist knowledge-sharing.
To mark International Women’s Day, a pop-up exhibition across four workplace lobbies celebrating storytelling, sustainability, and feminist knowledge-sharing.

London Heritage Quarter is a collective of four Business Improvement Districts working with local partners to drive economic growth and enhance the environment in this historic area. To mark International Women’s Day, London Heritage Quarter and Artiq present an exhibition across four workplace lobbies in the district.
This pop-up collection serves as a temporary creative intervention, offering thousands of workers a fresh perspective on how feminist artistic practices reframe traditional technologies, such as weaving, natural dye-making, and storytelling, as forms of innovation, while highlighting the vital role of women in shaping ecological resilience.
This pop-up collection serves as a temporary creative intervention, offering thousands of workers a fresh perspective on how feminist artistic practices reframe traditional technologies, such as weaving, natural dye-making, and storytelling, as forms of innovation, while highlighting the vital role of women in shaping ecological resilience.
The selected artists and curated works focus on feminist perspectives on technology, nature, and sustainability, bringing forward alternative narratives that remain underrepresented in mainstream discourse.
Nowshin Prenon reimagines traditional weaving as contemporary art; Emma Boittiaux captures the shared care and advice in women's breastfeeding groups through photography; Sana Rao’s paintings embrace environmentally conscious, nature-based practices; Ellen Mae Williams creates natural dyes from discarded food waste; and Rebeca Jewell repurposes archival materials in printmaking to raise awareness of contemporary bird trapping.
Nowshin Prenon reimagines traditional weaving as contemporary art; Emma Boittiaux captures the shared care and advice in women's breastfeeding groups through photography; Sana Rao’s paintings embrace environmentally conscious, nature-based practices; Ellen Mae Williams creates natural dyes from discarded food waste; and Rebeca Jewell repurposes archival materials in printmaking to raise awareness of contemporary bird trapping.
Each artist, in their own way, highlights the power of storytelling, sustainability, and feminist knowledge-sharing.




