Since it took its current form in 2002, LUX has been involved in over 100 screenings and exhibitions. Most have been in and around London, but many have subsequently toured in the UK and internationally.
Working with a variety of institutions and partners - including Tate Modern, Tate Britain, Whitechapel Gallery, Cecil Sharp House, the Imperial War Museum, the Goethe Institute and others - on projects ranging from intimate 'salon' events in the LUX office to major gallery shows and film seasons, LUX has sought to address a broad range of audiences and to embrace the full spectrum of artists' moving image work.
Below is information on all previous LUX projects, organised by year. Several major projects also have their own pages, which are indicated at the bottom of this page.
| IN.SITE A project that focuses a creative and critical eye upon the conventional logic of meanings and experience contained within a physical film and video archive. |
![]() |
Left: Sebastian Buerkner |
![]() |
LUX projects 2007 Left: Women of the Rhonnda |
![]() |
LUX Projects 2006 All of the LUX events and exhibitions from 2006, including the Matthias Muller season at the Goethe Institute, the Argument season at the Whitechapel Gallery and the Unnamable gallery show at Lounge Left: Home Stories (1990), Matthias Muller |
![]() |
LUX Projects 2005 All of the LUX events and exhibitions from 2005, including Owen Land and David Lamelas at Tate Modern, Phil Collins & Alex Bag at Tate Britain, The Artists Cinema at the Frieze Art Fair and the New Work UK series at Whitechapel Gallery Left: Alex Bag |
![]() |
LUX Projects 2004 All of the LUX events and exhibitions from 2004, including Vasulka Video at Candid Arts and salons with Dirk De Bruyn, Matthew Noel-Tod, Lenka Clayton, Thom Anderson, Jerome Hiler, Ruth Novaczek, Alia Syed, Bjorn Melhus, Alia Syed and Peter D'Agostino Left: The Matter (1974), Woody Vasulka |
![]() |
LUX Projects 2003 All of the LUX events and exhibitions from 2003, including a tribute to Stan Brakhage at the Other Cinema, Visionary Landscapes at Cecil Sharp House, Harun Farocki at the Goethe Institute and Alternative Histories of Modern Conflict at the Imperial War Museum Left: The Inextinguishable Fire (1969), Harun Farocki |
![]() |
LUX Projects 2002 All of the LUX events and exhibitions from 2002, including Shoot Shoot Shoot at Tate Modern, Battle of Chile at Conway Hall and salons with Vicky Smith, Thomas Draschan, Anne McGuire, Ann Course & Paul Clark, Brian Boyce, Philip Hoffman, Gunvor Nelson and Ian Helliwell Left: Battle of Chile (1973), Patricio Guzman |
![]() |
Visionary
Landscapes: folk, film, landscape A May 2003 bank holiday weekend of film, music, performance and installation exploring English landscape and folk culture in the moving image. |
![]() |
California
Sound / California Image: From Hollywood to San Francisco: The West
Coast and the Avant-Garde Presented at Barbican Screen, 13-19 June 2003 |










