Take a FREE Seed Packet

Adrian J Cotterill, Editor-in-Chief

To support their ground-breaking exhibition Unearthed: The Power of Gardening (which runs until August 10, 2025), the British Library has commissioned Anything Is Possible for a landmark 48-sheet special-build by Camden Market.

Sam Fenton-Elstone, CEO and Co-founder, Anything is Possible told us “This community-focused outdoor activation underscores gardening’s dual role as personal sanctuary and collective force. By going out into Camden’s public realm, we’re helping the exhibition dig in with real-world impact – and reminding Londoners that great things grow from small seeds.”

In place until June 8th, this high-impact activation:

  • Is created from hundreds of packets of sunflower, tomato and basil seeds which passers-bys can pull off and take home to regenerate their garden, balcony or window box
  • Occupies one of Camden’s busiest thoroughfares, opposite The Stables and along the main pedestrian route from Camden Station
  • Targets Camden residents who may not have engaged with the British Library but are passionate about gardening, greening initiatives, and community improvement.

Jamie Andrews, Director of Public Engagement, British Library, said “When you think of gardening you may not automatically think of the British Library so we were excited at the prospect of how this exhibition could sow seeds well beyond the Library’s walls in the borough of Camden. We hope the seed billboard will encourage green-fingered Camden residents and passers-by to discover more about the unexpected power of gardening in all its forms, both by seeing their tomatoes, sunflowers and basil blossom and by coming to find out more in our Unearthed exhibition.”

Tracing personal stories alongside global histories, Unearthed celebrates gardening as a force for creativity, resilience and community. From the first English gardening manual to an early True Levellers pamphlet and from medieval herbals to guerrilla gardening zines, the exhibition shows the power of gardening and the impact it has on people, communities and the environment in Britain.

The interactive installation aims to rally passers-by to explore how gardening shapes community, culture and climate action.


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