The Good Studio project is a risograph printer based in Brixton that promotes conversation and exchange through the publishing process.
Alongside collaborating with artists, makers and community groups the Good Studio project supports community printing in public spaces including: Photofusion, Southwark Park Galleries, Freelands Foundation, The Feminist Library and Science Gallery London.
The studio is run with sustainability in mind, using low impact materials such as solvent-free ink, FSC and recycled paper. The project is currently based on Assemble’s Fabric Floor, International Building, Brixton where the risograph print process has been opened up to other studio practitioners as part of BuyGiveWork.
The Good Studio project has just completed a period of residence at the Freelands Foundation project space as part of an extended creative research project Art Teachers Should Have The Space To Be Rebellious with Freya Kehoe and has a forthcoming commission with Science Gallery London 2024/5.
Recent publications and public workshops include:
NHS staff workshop and risograph publication for Re-Imagining the Archives – 75th Anniversary of the NHS; publication and menu for I Have Eaten It, a 4-week kitchen takeover at Refettorio Felix with Open Space and Laura Wilson; risograph edition and exhibition wallpaper for Sweet Harmony: Radio, Rave & Waltham Forest, 1989-1994, Rendevous Projects; publication design, print and collaborative residents production process, The Wooden Stick, Create London.
The Good Studio project is all about opening up access to the means of production and was featured in Art Licks magazine’s Interdependence issue.