Reframed: The Woman in the Window
Reframed: The Woman in the Window is the first exhibition to explore the enigmatic motif of the ‘woman in the window’.
Tuesday to Sunday, 10am–5pm.
Reframed: The Woman in the Window is the first exhibition to explore the enigmatic motif of the ‘woman in the window’.
Tuesday to Sunday, 10am–5pm.
TJ Boulting presents Boo Saville: Ma. Ma incorporates her renowned colour field paintings and detailed drawings with a narrative that draws on her own reflections on motherhood and journey of involuntary childlessness.
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This summer, the Estorick Collection presents an exploration of the relationship between Ukrainian-born American artist Alexander Archipenko (1887- 1964) and the masters of Italian modern art.
Wednesdays-Saturdays 11.00-18.00 | Sundays 12.00-17.00
The inaugural exhibition in Matt’s Gallery’s new Nine Elms space will be Cold Light – a new video installation and virtual reality work by Lindsay Seers & Keith Sargent.
Wednesday – Sunday, 12pm – 6pm
Animal Magnetism marks the first time that an artist will respond to the unique character of the CCA’s architecture, and will be Virginia Overton’s first solo show in a UK institution.
Wed–Sun, 12–6pm
White Cube presents an exhibition of works by Jeff Wall at Mason’s Yard. Comprising both new and earlier photographs spanning a twenty-year period, the selection foregrounds Wall’s attention to the forms and methods of picture-making and his prolonged observation of everyday life.
Tuesday - Saturday 10am - 6pm
White Cube Bermondsey presents an exhibition by Andreas Gursky featuring new and recent photographs.
Tuesday - Saturday 10am - 6pm Sunday 12pm - 6pm
Featuring painted compositions, three-dimensional works, film and an environmental structure that invites viewer participation, the exhibition illustrates the extraordinary and enduring influence the Brazilian artist Hélio Oiticica had on the development of international contemporary art.
Tuesday – Saturday: 11:00am – 6:00pm
Rodney Graham returns to London for his thirteenth show with Lisson Gallery, exhibiting a new suite of paintings developed from a series begun with an online exhibition, ‘Painting Problems’ two years ago.
Tuesday – Saturday: 11:00am – 6:00pm
Camden Art Centre presents the first institutional solo exhibition in London by Lily van der Stokker (b. ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands, 1954), one of the Netherlands’ most celebrated contemporary artists.
Tuesday to Sunday: 11.00am – 6.00pm Thursdays: 11.00am – 9.00pm
The Wilson twins have been working together for over 30 years. From early on their work often examined liminal zones of exclusion, abandoned military sites and buildings.
Wednesday – Sunday, 11 am – 6 pm
One of the most acclaimed artists of his generation, Thomas Schütte’s real and invented forms, often distorted and unsettling, explore themes of cultural memory, struggle and the impossible utopian ideal.
Tuesday–Friday: 11–6 Saturday: 11–5
The exhibition marks Nicodemus’ first solo show in London in over 15 years and brings together a selection of works spanning 40 years, including unseen paintings from The Wedding series.
Tuesday – Friday, 10am – 6pm Saturday, 11am – 5pm
David Zwirner presents Drawn to remember, an exhibition of new paintings by Indian artist Mahesh Baliga, on view in The Upper Room at the gallery’s London location. This will be Baliga’s first solo exhibition outside of India.
Tuesday–Saturday 10–6
David Zwirner presents new work by American artist Suzan Frecon. On view will be new large-scale and midsized canvases that elaborate on the artist’s enduring investigation of painting, as well as her richly textured paintings on paper.
Tuesday–Saturday 10–6
Alienarium 5 is a speculative environment that invites us to imagine possible encounters with extraterrestrials. Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster’s first major institutional solo show in the UK since TH.258 at Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall in 2008
Tuesday - Sunday (Open Bank Holiday Mondays) 10am - 6pm
The Royal Collection holds some of the most significant examples of Japanese art and design in the western world. For the first time, highlights from this outstanding collection are brought together to tell the story of 300 years of diplomatic, artistic and cultural exchange between the British and Japanese royal and imperial families.
Thursday-Monday 10am - 5.30pm (Closed Tues and Wed)
Using transformation, playfulness and storytelling, Cornelia Parker engages with important issues of our time, be it violence, ecology or human rights.
Monday to Sunday 10.00–18.00
Following the 500th anniversary of the death of Raphael (1483–1520) in 2020, experience the Italian Renaissance master’s exquisite drawings and trace his influence through the work of his pupils.
Daily: 10.00–17.00
Discover some of the most compelling emerging talents in the field of contemporary drawing, displayed alongside highlights from the Museum’s collection dating back to the early 1500s.
Daily: 10.00–17.00
The first major retrospective of Walter Sickert at Tate in over 60 years, this exhibition explores how he had an often radical, distinctive approach to setting and subject matter.
Monday to Sunday 10.00–18.00
In the new works, Celia Paul addresses abiding subjects: self-portraits, the artist’s studio and a last portrait of her husband
Tuesday–Saturday: 10am–6pm.
Hales presents Flames Like Rainbows a solo exhibition of works by John Hoyland.
Thursday - Saturday, 11am-6pm
The first major exhibition to explore the representation of foundlings, orphans, adoptees, and foster children in comics, graphic novels and sequential art from around the globe.
Tuesday - Sunday 10am-5pm
Pangolin London presents a new exhibition of paintings and prints – many never seen before – by prominent St Ives artist Breon O’Casey. Bringing together the greatest number of paintings ever presented to the public, Painting is Another Language will also display some of the painter’s early works.
Monday - Saturday, 10:00 - 18:00.
The culmination of three years of work by artists Sonia Boyce, Helen Cammock, Rory Pilgrim and Ilona Sagar, Radio Ballads presents four bodies of work created through collaboration with social workers, carers, organisers and residents which explore stories of labour, and who cares for who and in what way.
Tuesday – Sunday, 10am-6pm.
Pace Gallery presents a solo exhibition of pioneering artist, Wang Guangle. Faded Colours will showcase a suite of new paintings by one of China’s preeminent contemporary abstract painters.
Tuesday-Sunday 10am-6pm
Alan Green is one of the great British abstract artists whose formative years were spent in London in the 1960s,
Monday - Friday 10am - 6pm Saturdays 11am - 5pm
Marlborough London presents Figuration, a group exhibition showcasing works by Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud, R.B. Kitaj, Leon Kossoff, Celia Paul, Paula Rego and Euan Uglow.
Mon – Fri 10:00-5:30 Sat - 10:00-4:00
Stephen Friedman Gallery presents its second solo exhibition by Venezuelan artist Juan Araujo. This new body of paintings follows a major solo installation at Art Basel Unlimited in September 2021.
Tuesday–Saturday, 11am–5pm.
Stephen Friedman Gallery presents Dominican artist Hulda Guzmán’s first solo exhibition in the UK. ‘Meet Me in The Forest’ brings together a body of vibrant new paintings centred on her immediate surroundings in Samaná.
Tuesday–Saturday, 11am–5pm.
Among the Machines is a major new exhibition of works from the Collection examining how humans interact with machines and non-human entities, featuring new augmented reality artworks created in direct response to the gallery space.
Thursday – Sunday 12–6pm