Leo Villareal

Based in New York, Mexican American artist Leo Villareal’s work sits at the intersection of art and technology.

For Illuminated River, Leo Villareal is working with cutting edge LED technology and custom software to ‘paint with light’, producing sequenced patterns that subtly unfold across the Thames bridge structures.

Leo Villareal joins a long tradition of artists who have been inspired by the Thames – among them Canaletto, JMW Turner, James Abbott McNeill Whistler and Claude Monet. Looking, too, to George Frideric Handel’s Water Music, Villareal’s light compositions echo the ever-changing movement of the river, using shifting hues drawn from the London sky during sunset, in moonlight, and at sunrise. He takes inspiration from the natural and social activity of the Thames; barges and boats moving cargo and people, the traffic surrounding the bridges, and the ebb and flow of the tides.

He has been inspired equally by light artists such as James Turrell and Dan Flavin, and by mathematician John Conway's work with cellular automata and the Game of Life. Since 2001 Villareal has created temporary and permanent light sculptures for public spaces and museums around the world, including Pixel Dust for Times Square Arts, Golden Game at Pace Gallery, Tokyo both 2025, Multiverse at The National Gallery of Art, Washington DC in 2008, Infinite Bloom at Amorepacific Museum of Art, Seoul, South Korea in 2017, and the Bay Lights on the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge originally in 2013, and reinstalled in 2025.

Running 1.8 miles in length, Bay Lights uses 25,000 energy-efficient, low voltage LED lights. Villareal was inspired by the surrounding area to guide his custom sequencing, integrating the kinetic motion of the water, air and traffic to create abstract, organic patterns in light on the bridge's cables.

Leo Villareal discusses the inspiration behind his artwork for London, Cannon Street, Southwark and Millennium bridges.

"Our aim is for a lighting master plan which reduces pollution and wasted energy, is sensitive to history and ecology and subtly re-balances the ambient lighting on the river to provide a beautiful night time experience for residents and visitors."
Leo Villareal

Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands

London-based practice Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands (LDS) were established in 1986, and have since completed a range of award-winning projects – from long-standing work on London’s South Bank, to innovative residential and office buildings and masterplans. LDS designed the Golden Jubilee footbridges which opened on the existing Hungerford Bridge in 2002, and which are now part of Illuminated River.
LDS have won over 80 national and international design awards, ranging from RIBA awards for excellence in architecture and British Council for Offices industry awards, to respected awards for house building and urbanism. They have worked extensively in London, with partners including Great Portland Estates, Coin Street Community Builders, Derwent London and Exemplar.

Atelier Ten

Atelier Ten are environmental design consultants, building services engineers and lighting designers who illuminate spaces with beauty and efficiency. Working across disciplines and at every scale, the practice helps clients deliver smart, efficient architecture that enhances wellbeing, respects natural systems and meets complex regulatory demands - quietly and elegantly doing more with less. 

Delivered by a small core team at Illuminated River Foundation, the project combines the expertise of numerous companies including:

Beckett Rankine
Colt Technology Services
Core Five
FM Conway
Iceni Projects
Jackson Coles
Leo Villareal Studio
Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands
Montagu Evans
Price & Myers
Temple Group
Thomson
Signify