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Historic London waterworks to become the Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration

Arts charity Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration is awarded a £3.75 million grant by The National Lottery Heritage Fund to restore the derelict New River Head buildings.

Illustration of a red brick building with a pedestrianised area and flowerbeds
Illustrator impression of the new Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration © Nora Walter

Arts charity Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration has been awarded a £3.75 million grant by The National Lottery Heritage Fund to restore the derelict New River Head buildings.

The heritage site in Clerkenwell will be opened up as a permanent public space, offering new galleries, learning areas and gardens. The grant brings the total funding secured to acquire and develop the site to £11.5 million, with work due to begin this autumn. Made possible by National Lottery players, philanthropists, charitable foundations and local partners, the project will create four galleries, a project base, a learning studio, gardens and play space, a café and a shop. It realises Quentin Blake’s long-held vision for a permanent national centre for illustration: exploring the heritage of art that is used every day, all over the world, to tell stories, capture discoveries, inform and persuade.

The project will enable:

  • Exhibitions, tours and events, shining a light on illustrators and their impact on our lives through time.
  • Creative projects, empowering people to share their own stories, heritage and ideas, expanding the charity’s work with schools, families, community centres and practising illustrators.
  • Supported employment, volunteering and local partnerships, opening up new possibilities in an area that has longstanding challenges in relation to employment, well-being and access to green space.

The project will also secure a permanent home for Blake’s archive of over 40,000 works, created over seven decades. The largest and most comprehensive to document the work of a single British illustrator, the archive offers unique insights into 20th and 21st century illustration, storytelling and publishing.

Two illustrations - a man on a stepladder drawing on a wall. A purple coloured building with flags.

The location for the Centre, the New River Head heritage site in Clerkenwell, played an essential role in supplying Londoners with clean water from the early 1600s onwards. The atmospheric Grade II listed engine house, windmill base (the oldest remaining example in London) and cobbled courtyards are currently derelict, locked behind iron gates. The works to sensitively restore and repurpose them will begin later this year, led by Tim Ronald Architects, a Clerkenwell-based practice that has won awards for projects including Wilton’s Music Hall, Ironmonger Row Baths, The Landmark Ilfracombe and Hackney Empire.

In the meantime, Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration has been working with illustrators, researchers and community groups to explore New River Head’s fascinating history ahead of opening. Installations and information panels around the Centre will use illustration to tell the stories of New River Head and its connections to more than 400 years of urban development and social change.

A woman with a table of plants and some children
Garden ideas share drop in at New River Head. © Valentina Zunino

Lindsey Glen, Director of Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration, said:

We’re overjoyed to be bringing the national centre for illustration to Clerkenwell, restoring and opening up hidden heritage with help from The Heritage Fund. The Quentin Blake Centre will breathe new life into New River Head’s atmospheric engine house, windmill base and stores, offering exhibitions, creative projects, gardens and play. It will be a welcoming, vibrant place where everyone’s stories and ideas matter, and every visitor leaves looking differently at the world around them.”

Quentin Blake, founder of Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration, said:

“New River Head will be the most extraordinary home for the art of illustration; the building could not be more appropriate if we’d designed it specially, and it’s setting is especially charming and sympathetic. One day it will show some of my archive of several thousand original drawings but, much more importantly, it will be an international centre for the display, discussion and celebration of the extraordinary wealth of illustration. We’re thrilled and thankful to have The National Lottery Heritage Fund’s support behind us.”

A man standing in front of a wall of illustrations
Quentin Blake at House of Illustration, 2014. © Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration

The Quentin Blake Centre is asking heritage, illustration and Quentin Blake fans to ‘mark their mark’ with a donation.

Find out more here.

With less than 15% of their campaign target to go they aim to raise £1m by the end of 2024.

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