Why 50 amazing artists have customised a slab of concrete
- Text by Cian Traynor
- Photography by Various
It started with a connection. James-Lee Duffy and Josh Jones, co-founders of the underground ‘zine Pavement Licker, used to share a studio with Jennifer McCormick, who heads up high-end art dealers Helium London.
There’d been talk of a collaborative project for years, but it never got going until they found the right idea – and a good cause – to hone in on for an exhibition.

The Real Dill

Steven Quinn
Taking their cue from the zine’s name, then pooling their combined contacts, the trio persuaded 50 top artists to treat a slab of pavement as their canvas – each of which would be put up for sale in a blind sale for charity.
The participants include Stanley Donwood, Ralph Steadman, Robert Del Naja (better known as 3D from Massive Attack), Antony Gormley, Pure Evil and fashion designer Henry Holland.

Gold Peg
“Part of the Pavement Licker ethos is to be a level playing-field,” says Josh. “The bigger names rub shoulders with up-and-coming artists on our pages and we wanted to do the same with this show. Over time we’ve made a lot of contacts and I guess we saved up enough credits by being nice people to ask a ton of favours.”
Getting to this point hasn’t been easy. James and Josh are used to hustling. They met while working at a “Nathan Barley-esque agency” called Cake in 2002 and that’s where Pavement Licker began.

Rutger de Vries

Stanley Donwood
After leaving Cake, the pair kept the ‘zine going while traversing different roles: James going from graphic designer to creative director, Josh travelling the world before becoming an editor and cultural journalist.
“I lucked out by getting a long-term role as in-house journalist for a worldwide music project and that kept me going while I got on my feet properly,” says Josh.

Andrew Rae
“I’ve since made books and magazines for all sorts of people. My career peaked in when I invented the Instagram account Celebrities in Ramen a couple of years ago. It’s been a downward slope from there to be honest.”
For the Pavement Lickers exhibition, they set themselves the challenge of pulling it off within six weeks – trying to find a venue and drink sponsors while still cutting through the noise taken up by Frieze and London Fashion Week.

Want Some Studio

Matthew Green
The underlying drive has been to raise money for Rett UK, a charity that helps those with Rett Syndrome, a rare neurological disorder that mainly affects young girls.
“My niece Esmé was diagnosed with Rett Syndrome about six years ago and I’ve been wanting to do something that would help her and other girls with it ever since,” says Josh.

Robin Eisenberg

Modern Toss
“I knew there would be some kind of Pavement Licker way but I wasn’t sure how. Once we’d started to formulate a plan with Jenni for this show, we always said that the money raised had to go to charity and Rett UK was a unanimous choice.”
Each piece of artworks is exactly the same size – a 40cm concrete square that weighs over 10g – and sells for £1,000.

A blank slab being received at Pure Evil.
To have a chance of buying one, you have to register online before the 1st of October. The artworks will be offered in a blind sale on a first-come, first-served basis – but you won’t know which one you’ve bought until the exhibition night on the 4th of October.

Patrick Morales Lee

Robin Eisenberg

Ralph Steadman

Luke Insect

Danny Sangra

Fred Coppin

John Karborn & Mobstr

HYT Studio

Rugman

Daniel David Freeman

JohnnyX

Josh McKenna

Pure Evil

Harry Malt

A CE London

Bert Gilbert

Karl Bielik

FAILE

Andy Welland
Find out more about the Pavement Lickers exhibition.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
In the ’60s and ’70s, Greenwich Village was the musical heart of New York
Talkin’ Greenwich Village — Author David Browne’s new book takes readers into the neighbourhood’s creative heyday, where a generation of artists and poets including Bob Dylan, Billie Holliday and Dave Van Ronk cut their teeth.
Written by: Cyna Mirzai
How Labour Activism changed the landscape of post-war USA
American Job — A new exhibition revisits over 70 years of working class solidarity and struggle, its radical legacy, and the central role of photography throughout.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Analogue Appreciation: Emma-Jean Thackray
Weirdo — In an ever more digital, online world, we ask our favourite artists about their most cherished pieces of physical culture. Today, multi-instrumentalist and Brownswood affiliate Emma-Jean Thackray.
Written by: Emma-Jean Thackray
Meet the shop cats of Hong Kong’s Sheung Wan district
Feline good — Traditionally adopted to keep away rats from expensive produce, the feline guardians have become part of the central neighbourhood’s fabric. Erica’s online series captures the local celebrities.
Written by: Isaac Muk
How trans rights activism and sex workers’ solidarity emerged in the ’70s and ’80s
Shoulder to Shoulder — In this extract from writer Jake Hall’s new book, which deep dives into the history of queer activism and coalition, they explore how anti-TERF and anti-SWERF campaigning developed from the same cloth.
Written by: Jake Hall
A behind the scenes look at the atomic wedgie community
Stretched out — Benjamin Fredrickson’s new project and photobook ‘Wedgies’ queers a time-old bullying act by exploring its erotic, extreme potential.
Written by: Isaac Muk