Police launch hunt for missing artist Sarah Cunningham

by · Mail Online

Police are hunting for missing British artist Sarah Cunningham after she disappeared in London in the early hours of Saturday morning. 

Cunningham, 31, was last seen on Jamestown Road, Camden, at around 3am on the morning of November 2 and hasn't been heard from since. 

The 5ft 3in-tall artist was last seen wearing a black top, black skirt and black Converse trainers, according to the Met Police, which is investigating her disappearance. 

The Met said in a post to X: 'Anyone who sees her or has any information is asked to call 101 and give ref: CAD 2349/02Nov.' 

The force added that she has links to Camden and Wandsworth.  

Her boyfriend, Jack Brown, pleaded on social media for any information on her whereabouts to be passed on to the Met. 

Police are hunting for missing British artist Sarah Cunningham (pictured) after she disappeared from London's Camden district
Cunningham, 31, (pictured, left) was last seen on Jamestown Road, Camden, at around 3am on the morning of November 2
The 5ft 3in-tall artist was last seen wearing a black top, black skirt and black Converse trainers, according to the Met Police

He wrote on Facebook: 'My girlfriend Sarah Cunningham has been missing in Camden since 2:30 am this morning, she was last seen leaving an apartment building on Jamestown Road. 

'Police have been notified and she has been reported as officially missing. If anyone has any information on her whereabouts or has seen or heard anything then please let myself or the police know.'

The painter had an exhibition at the Lisson Gallery between June and July. The gallery also appealed for information, writing in an Instagram post: 'We ask anyone who might have seen or heard anything, or might have any information on Sarah’s whereabouts, to please urgently contact us or the Metropolitan Police on 101. We are in touch with her family and the police (crime ref: 5483).'

The gallery, which hosted her in Los Angeles, said of her work: 'Throughout this exhibition, Cunningham explores aerial and bodily movements, flipping directions and orientations until reaching that moment when verticality and horizontality shift or tilt beyond recognition – when up becomes down, or left suddenly turns right.'