Temple of Agape

Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan created the Temple of Agape, a temporary installation commissioned by the Southbank Centre for their summer ‘Festival of Love’.

Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, 2014
Temple of Agape is a celebration of the love of humanity, one of the seven Ancient Greek themes of love represented at the Festival.
Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre
Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre, 2014

Southbank Centre’s summer festival will showcase love in all its forms. A series of weekends will explore the seven Ancient Greek themes of love through an array of workshops, performances and installations. The seven ancient themes: Agape, Storge, Pragma, Philia, Philautia, Eros & Ludos.

The Finale weekend, is the Big Wedding Weekend, inspired by Agape — the love of humanity. To celebrate the year in which same-sex marriage became legal, all couples, gay or straight, young or old, are invited to marry or renew vows on the stage of the iconic Royal Festival Hall.

Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre
Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre, 2014
“Love is the most emotive subject and to be asked to consider how to express " Agape" one of the 7 types of Love was hugely challenging and thought provoking. Agape — the Love of humanity felt perfect for us and at the beginning easy, ‘Love’ we thought, we all know about it, its all around us, we have felt it and therefore we should know how to express it in our work. But when we started thinking about it and all the clichés how do you do something that is new?
We have travelled widely and experienced many types of places, building a temple of Love felt right, making a place for joy and noise as well as quiet contemplation”.
Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre
Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre, 2014

The temple developed very quickly from the initial sketch  Morag did on a train.

The Agape procession begins with a neon ribboned 60m canopied series of love benches which lead to the entrance of the temple. The visitor can then journey through or stop and sit in the dappled lit temple and then proceed up the flight of stairs festooned with banners and signs that form a joyful parade to the next level of the Southbank Centre. The installation creates the chance for visitors to experience new views and a new entrance to the Royal Festival Hall balcony for the duration of the festival.

Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre
Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan, Temple of Agape, Southbank Centre, 2014
The Temple stands proud like a peacock with its giant Martin Luther King quote – “I have decided to stick with love”, expressing the power of love to the world. Inside its heart is calm and dappled with light for contemplating complex emotions, a place that can transform with love expressed within.
The temple stands 8m high and 12m wide. Made from a scaffold structure, supporting hundreds of words and clad with hand-painted exterior ply. Over 300 wooden panels of varying sizes were painted in Morag’s studio over a three week period with the help of two assistants, Lizzie Toole & Kathryn Cross and a group of great volunteers who gave their time unconditionally.

Morag Myerscough & Luke Morgan
Temple fo Agape
Curated by:
Georgia Ward, Southbank Centre
Producer: Beth Burgess, Southbank Centre
Project Manager: Paul Denton, Southbank Centre 
Specialist Scaffold & Temporary works engineers: Tubular Techniques Limited
Scaffold Contractor: Castle Scaffolding Ltd
Painting: Morag Myerscough, with Lizzie Toole, Kathryn Cross and a group of volunteers
Gross internal floor area: internal temple area 6m x 6m
External dimensions: 12W x 6L x 8H

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