
- SARAH MYERSCOUGH
18 Balderton Street Mayfair London W1K 6TG
The gallery is currently open by appointment only.
T: +44 20 7495 0069
Bio
Founded in 1998, Sarah Myerscough Gallery is a leading voice in contemporary craft and material-led practice. The gallery represents an international roster of artists working at the intersection of craft, design, and sculpture. Their practices reflect an attunement to cultural relationships with natural materials, particularly wood, combining traditional craftsmanship with innovative approaches that challenge disciplinary boundaries.
Through skills honed in dialogue with material, our artists articulate complex philosophical questions that contextualise our present-day relationship to making. Their practices speak to environmental, social, and cultural representation, often navigating a coexistence with the natural world. Through its programming, the gallery invites ongoing reflection on how we embrace the significance of the handmade to foreground the intelligence of materially grounded and conceptually rigorous works.
The gallery continues to foster long-term collaboration with artists, curators, critics, and institutions, and is committed to expanding the role of craft within contemporary culture, representing works from bespoke furniture collections and architectural applications to dynamic sculpture and installation. In October 2025, the gallery will relocate to The Schoolhouse, a three-storey Victorian building in Mayfair. This new space will house two exhibition halls and the newly established Crafted Art Foundation — an educational and curatorial centre dedicated to advancing critical discourse around craft as both cultural practice and social infrastructure.
Sarah Myerscough Gallery returns to PAD 2025, positioned on a larger stand with artists Adi Toch, Aldo Bakker, Aneta Ragel, Arko, Ash & Plumb, Christopher Kurtz, Eleanor Lakelin, Ernst Gamperl, Gareth Neal, Julian Watts, Katrien Doms, Kenji Honma, Luke Fuller, Marc Fish, Mayumi Onagi, Nic Webb, Peter Merigold, Sukkeun Kang, Tadeas Podracky, Tomonari Hashimoto, and Wycliffe Stutchbury.
Read






