Dust and Shadow

We delve into the remarkable history of 59 Brick Lane in London’s East End. With the Dash Arts base in East London’s Toynbee Studios and events regularly hosted at Rich Mix London, this ever-evolving building has long been our neighbour.

A spiritual and communal home to thousands over the centuries; 59 Brick Lane was born as a Huguenot church, later becoming a Methodist church, then a synagogue, and is now home to the Brick Lane Mosque.

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To get to grips with this building’s huge legacy, host and Dash Arts Artistic Director Josephine Burton is joined by the Vice Chair of the Brick Lane Mosque Harmuz Ali, author Rachel Lichtenstein, who researched the building as part of her book On Brick Lane, architect and co-curator of the UK’s architectural pavilion at this year’s Venice Biennale Shahed Saleem, architect Dan Leon (who worked with Shahed on the Friday, Saturday and Sunday multi-faith architectural project), director of the Swadhinata Trust Ansar Ahmed Ullah, academic and curator Rosalind Parker, who has written about faith in the public space, and Rebekah Coffman, an American academic at NYU whose research focuses on architectural reuse.

Supported by Foundation for FutureLondon and City of London.

LINKS:

  • See Rachel Lichtenstein's online project A Memory Map of the Jewish East End here

  • To buy Rachel Lichtenstein’s book On Brick Lane click here

  • Find out more about the Friday, Saturday and Sunday multi-faith architectural project here

  • Find out about the Swadhinata Trust here

  • See the Brick Lane Mosque website here

Music:

  • Umbra Sumus - Jah Wobble

  • Pagamenska - Oi Va Voi

Listen to more live and dash cafe episodes:

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Breaking Silence: The Pact of Forgetting

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Arvo Pärt: Time, Text and Tintinnabuli