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Skate 50: Southbank Centre Celebrates 50 Years of the Undercroft Skate Space

To mark 50 years of the Undercroft Skate Space, the Southbank Centre will present Skate 50, a multimedia exhibition telling the history of the iconic skateboarding space and the communities it has fostered over the past half-century. Developed alongside active members of the Southbank skate community, Skate 50 will include new commissions utilising photography, moving image and sound to delve into the stories that have shaped one of the most recognisable spaces in skate culture.

The Undercroft Skate Space is widely considered as the birthplace of British skateboarding. A space left open to the public when the Queen Elizabeth Hall was built in the 1960s, its concrete ledges, ramps, and pillars were then adopted by skateboarders in the mid 1970s. Fifty years on, and it is now one of the oldest continuously used skateboarding locations in the UK, home to a community that spans five generations and a cornerstone of creative expression.

From archive footage to fashion-forward portraiture of the noughties and contemporary depictions of the skate space today, Skate 50 will present a variety of documentary-style films, combining moving image and photography, interspersed with stop-frame animations and soundscapes, to tell the story of the Undercroft Skate Space. Keeping the skate community at the heart of the project, Skate 50 stems from a series of workshops facilitated by filmmaker Winstan Whitter, bringing together different generations who have used the space over the years to identify notable events across the five decades. 

Featured artists – all of whom have a personal connection to skateboarding – include filmmakers Winstan WhitterDan Magee and Jack Brooks, founder of skatewear brand Palace, Lev Tanju, animator Sofia Negri, skate collective Keep Rolling Project and sound artist Beatrice Dillon

Mark Ball, Artistic Director of the Southbank Centre, says: 

The Undercroft Skate Space is a vital part of the Southbank Centre’s cultural make-up, a space that has been a home for contemporary culture, skateboarding and creativity for half a century. And who better to tell these stories than the communities that have directly used it and continue to do so. In the Southbank Centre’s 75th anniversary year we’re thrilled to be commemorating this iconic space, celebrating all corners of our site and the incredible stories that are embedded into our foundations.

Filmmaker and skateboarder Winstan Whitter, says: 

“The South Bank Undercroft offered me a space I could hold with my friends, to fully express myself growing up there as in my early teens to adulthood. It’s an extremely important space for young people, to have free spaces they can hold which is still echoed today and beyond”.

Shane O’Brian, a London skateboarder who first came to the Southbank skate space around 1976, says: 

“Everyone knows the Southbank around the world, it’s iconic. Back in the day, if someone asked if you were a ‘Southbanker’ you’d proudly say yes – you had that title, you had your belonging. I’m 60 years old, and I’m still a skater, I’m still here now. The Southbank skate space has shaped my life from a kid of 10 to 60, with a community that has lasted decades.”

Skate 50 is part of the Southbank Centre’s 75th anniversary celebrations, which will take place across 2026 both at the Southbank Centre in London and across the UK. Skate 50 is curated by Curator Cedar Lewisohn, Assistant Curator Mark Healy and Curatorial Assistant Mollie Jones with exhibition design by Woods Bagot.

Skate 50, 30th April – 21st June 2026, Undercroft, Southbank Centre, southbankcentre.co.uk/skate-50

This event is offered on a ‘pay what you can’ basis. Free tickets are available, but if you’re able to pay the suggested ticket price of £8 or more it will support those who otherwise wouldn’t be able to attend.

To coincide with Skate 50 and Go Skateboarding Day in June, the BFI will showcase a curated skate cinema programme in venue at BFI Southbank and online on BFI Player, celebrating skateboarding’s unique ability to unlock creativity; from stills photography and fashion to music and guerrilla filmmaking. PUSH PLAY (19th-21st June) will include shorts, features, premieres, workshops and talks with established filmmakers discussing their roots in skating, alongside emerging voices from within the global community. PUSH PLAY proposes skate cinema as a vibrant cultural space for dialogue between cities, generations, and creative practices, beyond nostalgia or surface subculture. 

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