Iniva

Over the course of its existence, Iniva has hosted and/or produced major solo exhibitions by significant British and international artists,[1] including sculptor Hew Locke ("Kingdom of the Blind", in 2008),[2] filmmaker Zineb Sedira ("Currents of Time" in 2009),[3] Donald Rodney ("In Retrospect", in 2008), Keith Piper ('Relocating the Remains' in 1997 and 'Unearthing the Banker's Bones' in 2016), Yinka Shonibare ('Diary of a Victorian Dandy' in 1998) and Guyanese painter Aubrey Williams in 1998.

Iniva and Autograph ABP partnered to build Rivington Place, a five-floor, 15,000-square-foot (1,400 m2) visual arts centre in East London.

It was the first publicly funded, purpose-built international visual arts venue constructed in London since the Hayward Gallery opened more than 40 years earlier.

Until 2008, cultural theorist [5] and sociologist Stuart Hall was chair of Iniva and Autograph ABP (the Association of Black Photographers, also based in Rivington Place).

[8] In October 2018, Iniva and the Stuart Hall Library moved out of Rivington Place, to the Chelsea College of Arts in Pimlico.

Rivington Place