The Art Club Show
27th February - 1st March
No booking required, just come and enjoy!
St Paul’s Church proudly presents its first Community Art Exhibition, celebrating the work of over fifteen artists from the church’s weekly Art & Wellbeing drop-in workshops.
Celebratory Opening
Friday 27 February 2026, 5:30pm – 7:30pm
Exhibition Dates
28 February – 1 March 2026, 8:30am – 5:30pm
Featuring work created over the past year, the exhibition reflects the calm, welcoming space where people of all ages and abilities can come together to create, connect and reflect.
Visitors are also invited to see the newly installed Green Man plaque in the church gardens, created collaboratively by members of the community art group and Antropia. The Green Man is an ancient figure, known across cultures as a symbol of resilience and the life force that continues through cycles of change. Several Green Man plaques have been installed across the city plaque, and each include a QR code that can be scanned to access a resource page with practical support for people affected by homelessness
Also screening: Roots Remember the Light, an intimate short film by Antropia, offering a glimpse into the lives and creative worlds of participating artists.
All are welcome.
All works are for sale.
About ANTROPIA
Antropia is a London-based Community Interest Company dedicated to advancing art, culture and wellbeing through site-responsive, participatory practice. They see art as an active force; one that can shift perception, build connection and transform how people relate to place and to one another. Their work is rooted in art as a social and spatial practice, where creativity becomes a meeting point between personal healing and collective belonging.
Antropia creates workshops, installations, performances and collective events with communities of all ages, including those experiencing marginalisation, displacement, or isolation. Their projects centre care, imagination and collaboration, supporting people to become active participants in shaping their environments and their own stories.

