London Mural Preservation Society

London Mural Preservation Society works to "Protect, Preserve and Celebrate Murals in London". The society aims to bring London murals to the attention of the people of London and the rest of the United Kingdom and the world.[1] London murals have been described as an "endangered species".[2]

The society was set up in 2010 and works to protect the memory of mural images by gathering information from the people involved in their creation, collecting local recollection of the mural's beginnings and bringing together photos from the past and the present. The society hope to preserve these murals by finding possible ways to fund restoration and investigate future conservation and protection. "We will celebrate the murals by bringing together those who were there from the beginning and those who walk past them every day without having a notion of their meaning and significance. Accessing the stories of the murals will be made available via the internet and through exhibitions across London."[3]

In 2010, the society supported a project to restore the Fitzrovia Mural in Tottenham Court Road, as well as the restoration of some of the Brixton Murals.[4][5][6]

References

  1. ^ London Mural Preservation Society accessed 19 September 2010
  2. ^ Top ten London murals, By Matt Brown, Time Out, 5 July 2006, accessed 19 September 2010
  3. ^ London Mural Preservation Society accessed 19 September 2010
  4. ^ Bid to breathe new life into the Tory Dracula Josh Loeb, 9 September 2010, Camden New Journal accessed 19 September 2010
  5. ^ Mural could return to its former grace, News Reporters, Fitzrovia News, 6 September 2010
  6. ^ Iconic London mural could be restored Wikinews 20 September 2010, accessed 20 September 2010

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Key: † No longer extant, on public display or in London (see List of public art formerly in London)