Radical Kitchen: Build Up



Find out more about the Radical Kitchen programme here: http://www.serpentinegalleries.org/exhibitions-events/radical-kitchen

23 August 2017 – Build Up

Build Up puts young people in control of construction projects that make a lasting contribution to their local community. Working across the capital and from its base in East London’s Cody Dock, Build Up gives young people the opportunity to make real decisions and influence their local area. Founded in 2014 in response to growing place based inequalities, the charity aims to create a generation of young people who are not limited by where they have grown up.

MazĂ­ Mas

On eight Wednesdays in July and August, a London community group or campaign organisation assembled in Kéré’s Pavilion at 1pm to share their recipes for creating and sustaining meaningful social change in the city. Deepening the connection with food, these groups met over a meal prepared by Mazí Mas, the pop-up restaurant and award-winning social enterprise established for and run by migrant women. Visitors to the Serpentine Pavilion were also able to purchase food by Mazí Mas, with all proceeds going back to their work.

Daily life in London is challenging for many due to rapid gentrification and the displacement and dispersal of many once tight-knit communities. How can the city sustain a sense of community and resilience? Founded in 2014, MazĂ­ Mas are a powerful example of a project making meaningful impact on the ground. Recognising that many migrant or refugee women are locked in a cycle of unemployment, Mazi Mas gives skilled home cooks training, payment and support to create sustainable livelihoods for themselves.

Inspired by this model, the Serpentine invited other groups creating sustainable projects and campaigns in their communities to this new strand of the Pavilion programme. Themes of care, solidarity, survival and resilience run throughout the work of the eight groups involved in Radical Kitchen, who tackle issues as diverse as housing rights, gentrification, food poverty, unemployment, migration, motherhood and community empowerment. These weekly talks opened up discussion to the wider public, exploring questions developed in conversation with Francis Kéré and building on his own ideas of socially-engaged architecture, as embodied in the Serpentine Pavilion 2017.

source

Save This Post
ClosePlease login