Jenny Adams

Hoarding Commission

Located at the junction of Blackfriars Road and Nicholson Street, London, SE1

Past event
A sketchbook by Jenny Adams

Jenny Adams has been commissioned to make a site-specific artwork for the hoardings on Blackfriars Road and Nicholson Street as part of Tenderground, Southwark Charities arts programme. Jenny's large-scale drawings are enlarged from her many sketchbooks documenting her daily life living in Edward Edwards House, the almshouse behind these hoardings. Designed in collaboration with graphic designer Charlie Noon, the images record the often overlooked details of our immediate environment – of plants, the stages of decaying fruit, roadworks happening outside her window or flowers picked in the garden and left on her windowsill by a neighbour. At the same time this hoarding celebrates the residents and marks the next phase for Edward Edwards House, a new building for a world class almshouse.

Jenny Adams was born in Nairobi, Kenya in 1932, attended Central Art School from 1950–54 and worked as a commercial artist for John Lewis & Partners and as an illustrator and designer. Jenny, now in her early 90’s, sketches every day. She was a resident of Edward Edwards House on Nicholson Street and currently lives at Hopton's Almshouse.

This hoarding installation is the first public commission from Tenderground, an arts strategy and commissioning programme for the almshouses of Southwark Charities. Tenderground is an innovative and ambitious programme which aims to embed art and culture into the daily life of its almshouses and their residents.

TENDERGROUND is directed by Laura Wilson and Clare Cumberlidge & Co and supported by Southwark Charities. Artist Laura Wilson and curator and cultural strategist Clare Cumberlidge work nationally and internationally and live locally, they said: “We are thrilled to be working with artists and the residents of the almshouses to deliver a programme of world class art to Southwark. We are lucky to have an artist as inspirational as Jenny Adams amongst the residents and are proud to launch the programme with her work.”

Southwark Charities has occupied the site on Blackfriars Road, SE1 since 1752, at which time it was used by Mr Boyfield’s Dye-House to dry cloth. Following this, for more than 250 years it has been home to Edward Edwards House, an almshouse for the people of Southwark. Southwark Charities’ almshouses offer older people the opportunity to lead independent lives in a safe, secure and supported environment. Southwark Charities are realising a major development of a new world class almshouse and office building behind these hoardings which feature Jenny Adam’s artwork on Blackfriars Road, London, SE1 to provide more long-term affordable housing for older people in partnership with JTRE London.

Caroline Croft, Southwark Charities Chair of Trustees said: “I am delighted that our charity has embarked upon an art strategy that is so ambitious and creative. Tenderground is already showing that high-quality art can make a positive difference to the lives of our beneficiaries and the wider community. I’m so excited by the programme and what is to come.”

Quote from Jenny Adams: “My first experience with Art was a jumble of nothingness. Then the colours hit me in my eyes, now I get the joy of smelling, touching and tasting, through Art. Everything is a beauty. Art has been and still is my life.”

About JTRE

JTRE London, established in 2019, is a real estate developer focused on significant development opportunities in prime central London. To date it has completed and delivered two award-winning developments, Triptych Bankside, a mixed-use, office and residential-led scheme, and the first new almshouse to be built in London for 50 years, Appleby Blue in Bermondsey for United St Saviour’s Charity.