Bus-stop art gallery lifts spirits in lockdown London

SPREADING THE LOVE: Sarah Lamarr and her daughter, Rosie, 4, who transformed a London bus stop into a children’s art gallery, pose for a photograph on Monday. Lamarr started the project to bring cheer to people during the Covid-19 lockdown in the UK
SPREADING THE LOVE: Sarah Lamarr and her daughter, Rosie, 4, who transformed a London bus stop into a children’s art gallery, pose for a photograph on Monday. Lamarr started the project to bring cheer to people during the Covid-19 lockdown in the UK
Image: HANNAH MCKAY/REUTERS

 

A London bus stop has been transformed into a children’s art gallery by a resident who wanted to brighten the drudgery of lockdown life, creating a colourful community hub amid the anxiety and isolation of the Covid-19 pandemic.

A handwritten sign with an Instagram handle encourages children and adults alike to contribute submissions, with the wall of the bus stop covered in drawings depicting things such as a unicorn, flowers and rainbows, which have come to symbolise positivity and solidarity with Britain’s health workers during the outbreak.

Sarah Lamarr, a part time teacher and mother of four-year-old Rosie, started the gallery when she woke up the day after Britain’s coronavirus lockdown began and realised she would be stuck inside indefinitely with only a bland bus stop to look at.

“I just wanted to do something to brighten it up so I didn’t have to look at a grey bus stop for the next however-long,” she said.

Lamarr said she felt like the protagonist of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1954 thriller Rear Window, which stars James Stewart as an injured photographer who watches his neighbours after he is confined to his flat with a broken leg.

“If you have a bus stop near you I would really encourage anyone to do the same because it’s just a really lovely thing to have in your community,” she said.

“If you are stuck in a first floor, second floor flat with no garden with children, it’s just a great thing to watch out the window.”

One picture of flowers was accompanied with a message saying “Let’s focus on the positive” while another drawing of a Superman costume said “Thank You Heroes” and listed roles which front-line workers are continuing to carry out.

Several people who saw the artworks on the bus stop in west London, near Turnham Green, said it had improved their mood.

“People definitely need to see these messages and it just adds colour and a bit of fun and a bit of brightness to what otherwise could be a tough day for somebody,” Vicky Leviten, a child minder and local resident, said.

“I think it just lifts the spirits, it’s fabulous.” — Reuters

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