31 January 2026 · Peckham Levels
The second event turned up the celebration. At Peckham Levels, Winter Warming Culture Day brought residents together for an afternoon of participatory art, live performance, food, and connection.
Rebel Led designed and facilitated two large-scale community artworks. "This Time Next Year, Rodney" — a nod to Peckham's most famous TV export — invited people to fill a giant Peckham silhouette with their hopes for the area's future. A second piece asked the simple question: "What is Peckham culture to you?" The responses were honest, moving, and revealing — touching on diversity, unity, belonging, LGBTQ+ inclusion, and a real appetite for better access to community health.
Steel pan from Tony UrbanSmash, a live kora player, and dancers filled the space with energy, while community leaders and councillors joined residents in conversation. We were also joined by Aymara Social Enterprise, who support Peckham's Latin American and minority ethnic communities — including around mental health and wellbeing. They threw themselves into the activities, shared the work they do, and brought a real dose of Latin energy and fun to the day. It was community engagement at its most joyful — people from every background creating something together.
31 January 2026 · Peckham Levels
The second event turned up the celebration. At Peckham Levels, Winter Warming Culture Day brought residents together for an afternoon of participatory art, live performance, food, and connection.
Rebel Led designed and facilitated two large-scale community artworks. "This Time Next Year, Rodney" — a nod to Peckham's most famous TV export — invited people to fill a giant Peckham silhouette with their hopes for the area's future. A second piece asked the simple question: "What is Peckham culture to you?" The responses were honest, moving, and revealing — touching on diversity, unity, belonging, LGBTQ+ inclusion, and a real appetite for better access to community health.
Steel pan from Tony UrbanSmash, a live kora player, and dancers filled the space with energy, while community leaders and councillors joined residents in conversation. We were also joined by Aymara Social Enterprise, who support Peckham's Latin American and minority ethnic communities — including around mental health and wellbeing. They threw themselves into the activities, shared the work they do, and brought a real dose of Latin energy and fun to the day. It was community engagement at its most joyful — people from every background creating something together.