Art On The Streets
London Art Fair Edition
On Tuesday, January 20th, 2026, seventeen artists saw their work displayed on a single curated digital billboard along Essex Road – one of London’s busiest art week routes. No commission. No gallery mediation. Just visually confident artworks placed directly in the path of thousands.
Creative Flair, the official media partner of the London Art Fair, launched the Art On The Streets – London Art Fair Edition as a short-run urban exhibition during opening day of one of Europe’s most prestigious art fairs. Rather than compete with the physical fair happening across Islington, they took a different approach – place selected artworks onto a premium portrait digital screen located on the A104, transforming the commuter route itself into an exhibition space.
The collaboration was designed to reach viewers at a moment when the art world was already primed for visual culture. Opening day of the London Art Fair is when London’s art community, collectors, and design enthusiasts converge on the city. Creative Flair positioned this billboard edition as a parallel experience – a moment where seventeen emerging and mid-career artists could broadcast their work to thousands of people simultaneously, during the city’s most significant art moment.
What Is the Art Fair Edition?
Unlike traditional billboard art exhibitions, which run across multiple locations and weeks, the Art Fair Edition is a concentrated showcase. A single portrait digital screen on a premium location – the Essex Road section of the A104, immediately adjacent to the Islington Design Centre where the London Art Fair itself takes place – displaying curated artist billboards for one opening day only.
This is not advertising. This is not sponsored content. This is a deliberate curatorial act – seventeen artists selected from open applications, their works displayed at scale during one of London’s busiest art world moments. The selection process was rigorous: Creative Flair reviewed hundreds of applications, evaluating work based on visual confidence, public impact, craft, and artistic vision. The result is a concentrated moment where emerging talent receives the same billboard exposure that multinational brands compete for year-round.
For artists, this represents a tangible career milestone. A billboard art exhibition during Art Fair Week positions work directly in front of collectors, curators, journalists, and fellow artists. The commuter traffic along Essex Road during opening day of the fair is exceptional – thousands of people for whom visual culture is already top of mind.
Where Art Met the City
The Essex Road location was strategic. The A104 is one of north London’s principal thoroughfares, running through Islington toward the City. During Art Fair Week, the flow of people along this corridor intensifies dramatically – designers, collectors, artists, and curious visitors moving between the fair, neighbouring galleries, and the creative ecosystem surrounding the venue. Placing a portrait digital billboard on this exact route meant placing art directly in the path of people actively seeking visual culture.
The proximity to the Islington Design Centre – where the London Art Fair is hosted – created a natural synergy. Rather than positioning the billboard as a separate event, Creative Flair framed it as an extension of the fair itself. Art Fair Week audiences were already engaged, already receptive. The billboard art exhibition offered a moment of discovery, a chance to encounter emerging work that existed outside the fair’s physical walls.
Charmaine Chanakira
Charmaine Chanakira’s explosive neo-pop work brought vibrant, unapologetic energy to the Essex Road billboard. Bold colour, fragmented forms, and a palpable sense of movement – this is art that demands attention, that refuses to be peripheral. At billboard scale, the work became a pure force of visual confidence.
Julie Cassels
Julie Cassels brought a radically different sensibility – intimate, quiet, deeply observed portraiture. The paradox of her work on a billboard is precisely what makes it powerful. In a medium designed for bold messaging and attention-grabbing spectacle, her subtle, vulnerable figures created a moment of stillness. Commuters stopped.
Matt Youth
Matt Youth’s fusion of fashion sensibility and fine art materiality brought luxury and texture to the screen. Gold leaf, collage, and compositional precision – the work signalled a contemporary artist working at the intersection of commerce and aesthetics. On a digital billboard, the gold elements caught light in unexpected ways, creating depth.
Stavri Georgiou
A hand reaching upward toward a luminous moon. Stavri Georgiou’s composition is deceptively simple but emotionally vast – a meditation on aspiration, reach, desire, and what lies beyond grasp. At billboard scale, the gesture became monumental, universal, immediate. Every viewer recognised themselves in the reaching hand.
Robert Walker
Robert Walker brought architectural precision and kinetic energy through bold geometric forms and arrows suggesting movement. His contemporary abstract art transformed the screen into a field of dynamic vectors. On a digital billboard, the geometric purity of the work created a striking visual break amid the organic chaos of the street.
Larissa Padget
Larissa Padget’s commanding portraits demonstrated mastery of representation and psychological presence. Her subjects stare directly outward, engaging the viewer with an intensity that became almost confrontational at billboard scale. This is portraiture as public art – a direct encounter between viewer and subject, mediated only by the artist’s hand.
“We select artists whose work is visually confident enough to command public space. That means artists working at the highest level of their practice, producing work that doesn’t apologise or diminish itself when displayed at scale.”
Creative Flair, on the LAF Billboard Selection Criteria
The Full Lineup
Beyond the six featured artists above, eleven additional emerging and mid-career artists were selected for inclusion in the Art Fair Edition. Each brought distinct visual languages and conceptual approaches to the shared billboard space.
Adela Osmani
Abstracted forms and colour exploring layered psychological space. Osmani’s work invites multiple interpretations, creating a shared visual experience that shifts with each viewer.
Allysha Johnson
Contemporary figurative work balancing representation and abstraction. Johnson’s practice centres on embodied experience and the materiality of the human form.
Fatima M Khan
Visual artist working across media, Fatima brought a distinctive approach to composition and spatial relationships, contributing a unique voice to the exhibition.
Jane Burdett
Observational painting practice grounded in careful study of light and atmosphere. Burdett’s work demonstrates classical technique applied to contemporary subjects.
Josefina Cruz
Mixed-media artist exploring materiality and surface. Cruz’s work engages with texture, process, and the evidence of making itself.
Leannza West
Contemporary practice combining figuration and abstraction. West’s work engages with identity, representation, and the spaces between visibility and invisibility.
Lukas Muller
Multi-disciplinary artist bringing technical precision to conceptual inquiry. Muller’s work bridges commercial and fine art sensibilities.
Natalie Peterson
Painter working with landscape and abstraction. Peterson’s work explores the relationship between observation and interpretation, between what we see and what we imagine.
Nathan Daniel
Artist and educator bringing social practice and community engagement into his work. Daniel’s practice is grounded in dialogue and participatory thinking.
Nicole Chapman
Contemporary artist working with colour and form. Chapman’s visual language is bold, assured, and designed to command attention in public space.
Rastislav Dzuro
Painter and visual artist bringing European sensibility to London contemporary art. Dzuro’s work combines technical mastery with conceptual rigor.
Why Art Fair Week Matters for Billboard Art
Art Fair Week creates unique conditions for public art billboards. The audience is already primed for visual culture. Collectors, curators, journalists, and artists move through the city with heightened perceptual attention. This is when billboard art exhibitions reach their maximum impact.
Creative Flair understood this. Rather than fight for attention during ordinary weeks, they positioned the Art On The Streets London Art Fair Edition as a moment of cultural concentration. Seventeen artists, one screen, one day, one route – Essex Road during opening hours of one of Europe’s most significant art fairs. The result was maximum visibility for emerging artists during a moment when the city’s tastemakers were already assembled and attentive.
How to Exhibit at an Art Fair Billboard Showcase
Participation in the Art On The Streets London Art Fair Edition was free to apply. Creative Flair issued an open call to artists across the UK, accepting portfolios and proposals for specific artworks suitable for billboard display. The selection process prioritised visually confident work – pieces that would command attention and reward extended viewing at scale.
Selected artists contributed £120 toward production, placement, and promotion. For Elevate members of Creative Flair, this contribution was waived – participation was entirely complimentary. This structure ensured accessibility while sustaining the programme’s operational costs.
The curatorial selection criteria were transparent: originality of vision, public impact, technical craft, and artistic coherence. Creative Flair reviewed submissions against these weighted standards, selecting artists whose work demonstrated mastery and innovation. The result was a roster of seventeen artists representing diverse mediums, geographies, and conceptual approaches – a billboard art exhibition that presented a genuine cross-section of contemporary practice.
The Future of Art Fair Billboard Editions
The London Art Fair Edition represents a new model. Rather than running separate events, Creative Flair positioned the artist billboard programme directly within existing art world moments – moments when audiences are already assembled, already receptive. Future editions are planned for International Women’s Day 2026 and the Affordable Art Fair, expanding the reach of public art billboards across London’s art calendar.
This is how the billboard art movement grows. Not through separate infrastructure, but through integration with existing institutions. Art fairs, gallery weeks, cultural moments – these are the moments when billboard art exhibitions reach critical mass and transform the urban visual landscape.
Want Your Art on a Billboard?
Creative Flair is accepting submissions for upcoming billboard art showcases throughout 2026. Apply now for future editions and get your work on a real billboard.
Apply Now
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