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Friday 17 January 2020 1:12 pm  |  Updated:  Friday 17 January 2020 1:18 pm

Phone zombies, an interactive ‘brain’ and milk bottle art at Canary Wharf’s Winter Lights festival

By: Helen Crane

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Winter Lights festival in Canary Wharf
EDITORIAL USE ONLY Martine Basson interacts with an installation called Mountain of Light by Angus Muir at the annual Canary Wharf Winter Lights festival 2020, London. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Wednesday January 15, 2020. The festival sees over 25 installations and immersive experiences by a range of internationally renowned artists set the dark nights aglow. The exhibition is free to the public and runs from 16th January to 25th January 2020 and is free to the public. Photo credit should read: Matt Alexander/PA Wire

Those who have taken a walk around Canary Wharf in the last week or so will have noticed some strange-looking structures popping up in the area’s streets, squares and parks.

Last night the purpose of all this finally came to light – literally, as the sculptures burst into vibrant illumination to mark the beginning of the sixth annual Winter Lights festival.

There are 25 installations in total, displaying what Canary Wharf calls an “eclectic curation of work at the intersection of technology and art”.

One of the highlights this year is Affinity by Amigo & Amigo, an interactive exhibit which ponders the power of the human brain. Visitors can step into a series of interconnected globes representing neurons and memories, touching them to send a ‘pulse’ around the sculpture.

Some of the exhibits at the Winter Lights festival. Credit: Matt Alexander/PA Wire

The Lactolight piece transforms 7,344 recycled plastic milk bottles into individual pixels within a giant, low-res screen, with the aim of spreading awareness about single-use plastics.

The festival will draw plenty of Instagrammers, but they might want to give Absorbed by Light by Gali May Lucas a miss. Featuring three hunched-over statues with their faces illuminated by smartphones, it satirises our obsession with devices.

The event is part of Canary Wharf’s efforts to liven up the area for visitors, ahead of the first-ever residents moving in later this year.

Two buildings will be up and running before the end of 2020: the 345-home 10 Park Drive, where homes start at £880,000, and the 327-home 10 George Street which is exclusively for rent with prices from £1,950 per month.

Brian De’ath, residential sales advisor at Canary Wharf group, says it is building a “new community” with “something for everyone.”

Alongside the homes it is also building 380,000 sq ft of shops, bars and restaurants and eight acres of public space, plazas and parks.

The Winter Lights festival runs from 16 -25 January from 4-10pm.

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Dive into Sea Lanes Canary Wharf, London’s new open-air swimming pool

Aerial view of bustling sea lanes near Canary Wharf with ships navigating busy waters under clear blue sky.

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