Documentary

Britain’s Invisible Empire

Join Dr. Georgie Wemyss on a walk around the former site of the East India Docks, to look at how the area’s connections with Britain’s imperial past are often invisible in the present day.
The East India Docks were completed in 1806, built by the East India Dock Company and supported by the East India Company who had begun the process of colonising land and people in east, south and south-east Asia centuries before. The docks were built to protect the profits of increased trade as a result of the company’s strengthening colonial grip. The company eventually demised, and their profits came more directly into the hands of the British Crown, with the East India Docks continuing to be used for trade up until 1967.
While the fact that the docks were once located here is referenced in a couple of places, there is virtually zero recognition of their ties to imperialism, and the profits that were made here off the back of the repression of millions of people across the globe.

The people of Reflections

Journey along the River Thames and meet the people of Reflections. Reflections is a tribute by the river communities marking the passing of Her Majesty the Queen and the accession of King Charles III.

Mudlarking at Trinity Buoy Wharf

Join mudlarker Nicola White on the foreshore at Trinity Buoy Wharf to learn the history of the area through found objects washed up by the Thames.
Trinity Buoy Wharf was set up by the Corporation of Trinity House as a depot for storing and testing chains and buoys in 1804. Lighthouse technology was tested and lighthouse keepers trained here. The East India Docks opened in 1806, with industries and eventually a community of people arriving in their wake. In this short film Nicola will explore the area’s relationship with scientific innovation, the manufacture of plate glass and Victorian London’s
criminal underworld.

Thank you Dance

The Thank You Dance by Ali Pretty from Kinetika and Jeanefer Jean-Charles MBE from Jeanefer Jean-Charles & Associates was originally commissioned as a section for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee Pageant, which took place on 5 June 2022, winding through the streets of Westminster and along The Mall past Buckingham Palace.

The Thank You Dance was a ‘Thank You’ to the Queen for 70 years of public service, and a ‘Thank You’ to all those who selflessly contribute to society, looking after our communities and laying the foundation for a better life for generations to come