The British Museum will mark the 250th anniversary of the United States Declaration of Independence with a new display examining... Read More
The British Museum will mark the 250th anniversary of the United States Declaration of Independence with a new display examining... Read More
Frida Kahlo's paintings remain extraordinary, but does Tate Modern devote too much space to the icon that emerged after her death?
In its centenary year as a public building, Leighton House is looking back at how its famous Arab Hall was designed and built.
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Some Bizzare founder Stevo Pearce brings his instinctive painting practice to Farsight Gallery with Chaos, a new exhibition of abstract works in London.
Later this year, St Martin-in-the-Fields will mark the 300th anniversary of the current church on the site - and they’ve opened a free tercentennial exhibition in its crypt.
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From Smash Martians to Perrier bottles and Bisto tins, the Museum of Brands celebrates the adverts, packaging and household names that filled British homes for decades.
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Fans can get up close to iconic outfits and props from the hit time-travel drama before they go under the hammer.
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From Hurvin Anderson at Tate Britain to David Hockney at Serpentine North, Tabish Khan selects the top exhibitions to see in London
Stranger Things seems to have broken into London as monumentally ugly sculptures of blood and gore are filling the Hayward Gallery at the moment.
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The V&A's Rising Voices exhibition brings together contemporary artists from across a vast region, resulting in a collection that is as varied as it is difficult to define.
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A new exhibition brings together Barbara Hepworth's rarely seen coloured sculptures, revealing how subtle hues transformed the celebrated artist's abstract forms.
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A free exhibition reveals how generations of female artists built professional careers through canine portraiture when few other artistic opportunities were open to them.
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Fashion, animals, Venice, photography and emotions.
More than an art exhibition, Lucy Ash’s latest show asks why some lives are remembered while others vanish, weaving together LGBTQ+ history, personal loss and social justice.
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Alex Israel transforms the surfboard fin into a monumental sculptural form in Upside Down at Gagosian Davies Street
From ancient myths to contemporary installations, a vast new exhibition explores humanity’s enduring fascination with the sun and moon through art, artefacts and popular culture.
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Bridging the Gap is a show of sculpture that draws inspiration from its immediate environment, using the proximity of Southwark Bridge as a metaphor
Bridging the Gap is a show of sculpture that draws inspiration from its immediate environment, using the proximity of Southwark Bridge as a metaphor
The Barbican opens one of its most ambitious exhibitions of the year tomorrow with Project a Black Planet: The Art... Read More
There are exhibitions that you can walk out of and think, that well, yes, it was nice, but… and wonder maybe why those artists or that art.
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A new National Portrait Gallery exhibition gathers hundreds of portraits, revealing how photographers, artists and the media helped turn Marilyn Monroe into a lasting cultural phenomenon.
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Invasive Species at Hypha Studios brings together fifteen women artists exploring memory, sensory experience, psychological dissonance and transformation
For the first time, Yinka Shonibare's Mr. and Mrs. Andrews without their Heads will be displayed alongside Gainsborough's Mr and Mrs Andrews
Julio Le Parc: Light. Colour. Action. is both a major retrospective and a timely tribute to one of the great pioneers of kinetic and participatory art.
From London hospital wards to campaigns across Africa, Tenderness and Rage examines the people who lived through HIV and AIDS and those who fought for change.
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The British Library is bringing a slice of the Orient Express to London this autumn, as a replica 1920s train carriage becomes part of a new exhibition celebrating crime writer Agatha Christie, 50 years after her death.
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Visitors can now see one of only three surviving copies of the 1526 Tyndale New Testament, a book whose translator was executed for heresy before his work changed England forever.
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Beauty, surgery, rabbits, eyeballs and the Thames.
RCA2026 brings together more than 1,600 postgraduate students across the Royal College of Art's London campuses in a major showcase
One of the most famous portraits of the Duke of Wellington is to be exhibited at Christie’s before going under the hammer, giving visitors a rare chance to see the celebrated painting for free.
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