Nana Varveropoulou

Artists

Nana Varveropoulou is a photographer, artist and lecturer. Varveropoulou’s practice and research is focused on various issues relating to human rights and social justice, often through the process of collaboration. Significant projects include No Man’s Land, a collaborative project exploring experiences of indefinite immigration detention in the UK, and Alternative Provision, a project investigating the causes and impact of exclusion from mainstream education, through the lens of the young people experiencing it.

Varveropoulou also works as an editorial photographer for various UK and European publications and as an artist/facilitator, supporting different communities in the UK through the process of developing community-led art projects.

In 2020 Varveropoulou was commissioned by Peckham Platform as an artist facilitator for Creative Civic Change, a community participation arts programme using arts and creativity to make positive change to communities across the UK. This programme, supported by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Local Trust and Big Lottery Fund, selected 16 communities across the UK (of which Peckham was one, via Peckham Platform) to work with different artists in order to explore how arts and culture can contribute towards the social change they want to bring about.

The workshops facilitated by Varveropoulou were the starting point of Tilting the Mirror, one of our longterm intergenerational programmes.

More Artists

Artists

Artist Jessica Voorsanger smiling and holding a bunch of flowers

Jessica Voorsanger

Jessica Voorsanger is an American artist living in London. She studied at the Rhode Island School of Design (BFA) and Goldsmiths College (MA Fine Art), and has had one-person exhibitions in London, New York, Edinburgh, Berlin & Turin.

Artist Sonia Boyce talking to a group of people on a microphone

Sonia Boyce

Sonia Boyce came to prominence in the early 1980s as a key figure in the burgeoning black British art-scene of that time – becoming one of the youngest artists of her generation to have her work purchased by the Tate Gallery, with paintings that spoke about racial identity and gender in Britain.

Artist Sarah Cole pouring talc on herself

Sarah Cole

Sarah Cole’s practice involves the orchestration of collaborative encounters as a form of live research into lived experience.

Meet the team

Our dynamic team includes producers, curators, artists and entrepreneurs from our local community

Meet the Team