The 12 Star Gallery, situated at the European Commission's offices in London (8 Storey's Gate, SW1 map), is the venue for regular exhibitions which celebrate the creativity and cultural diversity that is the hallmark of the European Union. All exhibitions are open to the public from 10am-6pm, Monday to Friday and entry is free.
6 January – 30 January 2009
Czech Republic (Re)Visited presents views of the Czech landscape in its rich variety and natural beauty as well as the landmark sights of one of Europe's most popular capital cities, Prague. The exhibition celebrates the launch of the Czech Presidency of the EU Council (1-6/2009). The two photographers, Stanislav Pokorny and Dagmar Pavlikova, were selected by the APF, the Association of Professional Photographers, which represent over 200 professional Czech photographers.
Organised by:
in collaboration with Asociace profesionalnich fotografu Ceske republiky (www.asociacefotografu.com).
3 - 13 February 2009
The Gorsedh of Cornwall together with CERES [the Centre for European Research within Cornwall] have organised this exhibition of paintings by contemporary Cornish artists living and working in the Duchy. The work of nine artists will be represented and the event will mark a notable Cornish occasion, enabling aspects of Cornwall's art to be made known to an internationally-based public.
The exhibition will be opened by Cornwall's Grand Bard, Mrs Vanessa Beeman.
The Gorsedh of Cornwall is Cornwall's College of Bards and custodian of Cornish tradition and culture.
CERES is a voluntary sector group maintaining and developing heritage links between Cornwall and the wider Europe. It has long-standing working associations with relevant areas in the European Union - Commission and Parliament - and with the Council of Europe.


3 - 13 March 2009
17 - 27 March 2009
Organised with the Royal Netherlands Embassy in the UK
31 March - 9 April 2009
Leonard Sash is a distinguished doctor and was official physiotherapist to Arsenal FC for over thirty years.
Sash began painting in 1960, when he first came to London from his native South Africa as a medical student and enrolled in night classes at Central School of Art. He developed a unique style, working with cut-outs and painting, creating vivid and colourful collages. They evolved through his frustration with traditional painting. Once working in the studio of his ex-patient Ivor Abrahams RA, Sash was expressing his disappointment with one of his paintings when Abrahams asked: "Aren't the any bits you like about it?" Sash picked out elements, and Abrahams suggested he cut them out.
Thus his work has developed and matured: the graphic figures and animals are represented in a subtle visual 'relief', frozen forever like a snap shot from a dream. There is an inherent theatricality to Sash's work, a sense of heightened comedy and drama created in part by the staging of the various parts to form the whole.
Leonard Sash is obviously a man of many talents, being a physician and an accomplished artist. His work overflows with joy and vitality...ready to jump out of the picture plane and run around in a riot of colour.
Ben Austin
6 - 16 October 2009
The images are at first amiable, even alluring, in their cool, linear clarity. They invite you in. You settle into the comfortably padded chair, stretch out on that reassuring bed, as relaxed as in a sanatorium. You wouldn’t ever sense, as an animal might, the hosed-down, painted-over killings. You wouldn’t see death coming. Then the electric current would be snapped on, the needle inserted.
Once the eye has been trapped, the imagination will follow. Viewer becomes victim. Now the stark outlines of lethal injection chamber and electric chair fill out with soundless horror: the mass silence of suffocated screams. Now the cleanliness jolts into focus: the sanitized surfaces cover up death’s messy spatterings, as seamlessly as the neatly repointed brickwork at Dachau.
Distanced and deadly factual, Robert Priseman’s etchings reveal a world we know exists in our midst but steadfastly avoid thinking about. These sinister spaces are host to the most deadly concepts of time. Between the snap of a neck and actual extinction lie some twenty minutes of throttled half-life. Even a severed head, its eyelids still opening and closing, lingers on. By appearing to gloss over the barbarity of official killing, Priseman’s images allow its full horror to seep more vividly and more memorably through.
Michael Peppiatt
This exhibition marks 'European Day against the Death Penalty,' held annually on 10 October.