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ABOUT

Brieze celebrates the thrill of encountering emerging talent before the rest of the art world takes notice. Spanning mediums from painting and printmaking to sculpture and installation, this exhibition offers an intimate, collector-friendly experience. Visitors will have the rare opportunity to meet artists, learn about their process, and acquire works directly from their debut market outing.

Exhibition Highlights

Running from 3 October to 2 November, with a private view on Friday 3 October from 7–11pm, Brieze is positioned as Camden’s vibrant, independent answer to Frieze week. This collaboration between Camden Open Air Gallery and The Koppel Project brings together twelve breakthrough artists, including Belinda Nathan, Masha Barks, Chao Feng, Cleo Stoutzker, Emmie C Lyon, Emma Loizides, Ewelina Skowronska, Harold Reed, Rice, Sophia Rosenthal, Tina Jane Hatton-Gore, and William GC Brown.

CATALOGUE

EARLY ACCESS OPENS

Demand is high, get in early by requesting a copy of the early release catalogue.

People waiting in line outside a building with 'The Koppel Project' sign.

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

The Kopple Project

The Koppel Project (est. 2016) is an arts charity, gallery, and creative hub based in London. We aim to support early and mid-career artists by offering affordable studio spaces. 

In addition to our studios, The Koppel Project galleries, exhibition and residency programme provides space, funding, and logistical support for staging projects and exhibitions by studio residents, guest artists, and curators. We collaborate with national and international artists, curators, and institutions from a range of disciplines to develop curatorial projects and thoughtful exhibitions that provoke dialogue and generate diversity in the art world. The mission of our programme is to stimulate transformative cultural exchange and extend knowledge and understanding across subjects. The Koppel Project is committed to exploring and sustaining innovative learning solutions through collaboration, hypothesising, experimenting, and ultimately helping to reinvent traditional learning systems.

The Koppel Project supports artist-led, critically engaged, and materially attentive practices. Our current curatorial approach prioritises work that is experimental, research-driven, and rooted in lived experience with a particular focus on process, context and access. We are interested in the spaces where art intersects with public life, identity, memory, and urban infrastructures. Avoiding spectacle, our programme centres care, complexity and slow gestures - always considering the social and spatial conditions in which art is made and received.

Alongside our in-house programme, we also offer our gallery spaces for hire to external artists, curators, and organisations. These rentals provide vital income that helps sustain our charity's broader work, including our support for emerging artists, public engagement initiatives, and subsidised studio provision. By hiring our spaces, artists not only gain access to professional exhibition facilities but also contribute to the longevity and accessibility of our community-focused programmes.

We are grounded in the brokerage of space, repurposing abandoned buildings and actively aiding and fostering the growth and development of creative communities in London. As such, we are a nomadic organisation, moving from site to site as necessary and adapting creatively to each new set of challenges and opportunities. We have been based in buildings from Baker Street to Stoke Newington, and along the way, we have worked with over a thousand artists, curators, arts organisations, creative brands, charities, and other institutions.

We take great pride in our team's flexibility and creativity, as well as our passion for collaboration and the strong community we've developed over the last ten years.

The Koppel Project is currently based in Chalk Farm, Euston, Elephant & Castle, Wandsworth Rd, and Kingston.