Tucked into a corner of London’s revitalised Elephant Park, Little Louie has quietly become the place to be. The exhibition City Meets Earth lands with the kind of creative energy that makes you want to linger: a showcase of artists who explore the push-and-pull between the built environment and the natural world, and the ways our own stories thread through both.
Expect beauty, grit, and plenty of heart.
A city, a story and a feeling
Organised by Creations Atelier, this is an exhibition that favours mood over map. Memory, texture and experience take centre stage as each artist reframes familiar cityscapes and elemental forms.
It’s your perfect stop for a Saturday brunch with a friend, a midweek hour of inspiration, or a solo wander when you’re in the mood to discover something new.
The Artists: Eleven Perspectives on Urban Life and Nature
What makes “City Meets Earth” so brilliant is how accessible and wonderfully tactile it feels. While most exhibitions warn you to keep your distance, this one seems to whisper “come closer and explore”
Statement mirror with a secret
Valentina Marini’s hand-crafted mirror frame is the talking point of the show. Built from countless Kinder eggs (yes, really) and dotted with tiny toy soldiers, her 72 x 72 cm piece turns playful nostalgia into a powerful meditation on identity in the modern city. Lean in and you’ll spot a miniature universe in motion — a witty, subversive reminder of the battles we fight behind polished surfaces.


Ancient wisdom for modern lives
Carry Hornby’s serene triptych, Mountain. Boat. Water., renders ancient oracle script in supple ink on Xuan paper (30 x 30 cm each, framed). Minimalist and meditative, these pieces chart the human journey — peaks scaled, waters navigated — and offer a beautiful pause amid the bustle.
Nature, but engineered
You can’t miss Mark Coster’s sculptural duo, ‘Green’ and ‘Blue’. Composed of 900 meticulously hand-painted pine elements, the works shift like a living gradient as you move. ‘I’m fascinated by how Coster sculpts depth in both natural and constructed environments,’ says artist and co-curator Paola Minekov. ‘These pieces tempt you into the in-between, where perception meets reality.’

A Cycle of Life

The show features Artist–architect Natalia Giacomino and her arresting Sun and Moon paintings. Large-scale acrylics that place the artist’s “heart” at the centre of eternal, abstract circles. Bold forms and a surprising colour palette bring a rhythmic charge to the room, playing off Coster’s precise geometries with creative effortlessness.
The Doors that remember…

Architect and photographer Nia Russo turns her lens on the ‘Doors’ of Arbëresh towns in Calabria, crafting images that go far beyond architectural study. Informed by Albanian mourning traditions — where doors are left open to guide a spirit’s departure — her photographs become eloquent symbols of transition, tenderness and cultural memory embedded in brick and timber.
Black-and-white, bright with meaning

Vita Cofano’s smartphone photograph from Terrazza Mascagni in Livorno finds poetry where order meets infinity. Instead of the expected sea view, she pivots to the façades behind, their windows echoing the terrace’s famous chequered pavement. Figures drift almost shadowless, creating the ‘metaphysical’ hush that lingers long after you’ve walked on.

Cities, as we feel them
Paola Minekov paints places the way memory holds them, transformed by feeling and sharpened by longing. ‘I’m not looking for realism,’ she says. ‘I’m after that special feeling that pulls me back to a city again and again.’ In her abstract cityscape Memories from San Francisco, familiar forms float through a colourful dreamscape where victorian inspired architecture, light and emotion entwine.



Blues Night, digitally remixed
Digital artist Rosie Arnoldi’s Blues Night at the Club is a smoky recollection made new. ‘Digital art is fascinating,’ Rosie says. ‘It’s like playing god. The universe is not the limit here.’ Blending 3D renders, photography and painterly 2D work, she conjures a place that is quietly cinematic and deeply comforting.


Reflections in glass
Artist Dil Vahidova channels courage into colourful glass art. Her whimsical fused-glass pieces play with light and transparency, sending gleams across the room. Joyful and a touch festive, they’re the sparkle your winter didn’t know it needed.
Beats in the brushstrokes

Caz Dowdall fuses mountain vistas with dancefloor energy. Palette knives carve terraine over textured bold abstract backgrounds. She paints to the rhythms of deep house, breakbeats and drum and bass pulse which inform her mark-making. ‘When I get ready to paint, the first thing on the agenda is music.’ She says ‘Music is a huge part of my process as it helps me get a flow state.’
Heart of a city, reimagined
The finale belongs to award-winning multi-media artist Michelle Baharier. Her artwork Heart of the City, a digital photo collage, is a love letter and a challenge in one: who is the city for, and how do we make space for every heart within it?
Can’t make it in person?
The full collection is also available to explore in a virtual exhibition online.
Why Little Louie, why now?
Little Louie is the perfect home for this conversation. Elephant Park’s urban energy meets community warmth; a casual coffee becomes a culture moment. City Meets Earth reflects how we live while opening new ways to see it.

If your diary is craving something uplifting and smart this holiday season, save the date:
Private View: 21 November, 6-9pm
Venue: Little Louie, Elephant Park 14 Ash Ave, London SE17 1GQ
Nearest Station: Elephant & Castle.
Bring a friend, take a notebook (Creations Atelier promises fantastic networking during the event), or simply let the work wash over you. This is contemporary creativity that invites reflection, dialogue and a dash of delight.
When city meets earth, we find ourselves somewhere richer in between.
With the support of Chris Cotterill and Danielle Davis from Konsileo Insurace
- Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Click to share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
- Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email




