- Michaël Borremans
- Alexis Ralaivao
- Anna Kristine Hvid Petersen
- Michael (Corinne) West
- Aboudia
- Action Pyramid
- Adam Rouhana
- Adelaide Cioni
- Adele Rannes
- Adjei Tawiah
- Adriano Costa
- Aisha Seriki
- Alberta Whittle
- Alejandro Otero
- Alicia McNamara
- alina frieske
- Alma Berrow
- Amel Bashier
- Amoako Boafo
- Amy Beager
- Ana Benavides
- Ana Viktoria Dzinic
- Anastasia Xirouchaki
- Andrea Büttner
- Andrew Maughan
- Andrew Sabin
- Anna Haskel
- Anna Zemánková
- Anna-Lena Krause
- Annette Kelm
- Antonia Kuo
- Anya Paintsil
- Araminta Blue
- Atta Kwami
- Autumn Wallace
- Awodiya Toluwani
- Becky Beasley
- Bijanka Bacic
- Bill Brandt
- BLCKGEEZER
- Boscoe Holder
- Bouvy Enkobo
- Brianna Leatherbury
- Calla Henkel
- Camilla Perkins
- Cara Benedetto
- Carl Mannov
- Carlos Cruz-Diez
- Carole Gibbons
- Carolina Aguirre
- Caroline Jackson
- Charlie Godet Thomas
- Charlotte Birnbaum
- Chris Ofili
- Christiane Peschek
- Cildo Meireles
- Cinthia Marcelle
- Cole Lu
- Collin Sekajugo
- Connie Harrison
- Daisy Dodd-Noble
- Damien Hirst
- Danica Lundy
- Daniel Correa Mejia
- Danielle Winger
- Danny Fox
- David Micheaud
- David Rickard
- Dayanita Singh
- Dean Sameshima
- Deborah Roberts
- Delia Hamer
- Domenico Gnoli
- Ebun Sodipo
- Eddie Ruscha
- Elizabeth Frink
- Elsa James
- Emily Weiner
- Emma Stone Johnson
- Enam Gnewonyo
- Erin Manning
- Euan Uglow
- Eugene von Bruenchenhein
- Eugenio Dittborn
- Fani Parali
- Fathi Hassan
- Fran Hayes
- Gabby R and El Bass of Project Art Works
- Gareth Nyandoro
- Geoffrey Holder
- Georg Baselitz
- George Rouy
- Georgia Gardner Gray
- Gerald Chukwuma
- Gilbert & George
- Giorgio Morandi
- Giulia Andreani
- Grace Hartigan
- Grace Woodcock
- Graham Crowley
- Graham Sutherland
- Grayson Perry
- Gurminder Sikand
- Hajime Sorayama
- Hampus Wernemyr
- Hannah Levy
- Hannah Starkey
- Harley Weir
- Harminder Judge
- Harmony Korine
- Heesoo Kim
- Helen Bermingham
- Helen Frankenthaler
- Hélio Oiticica
- Henrik Godsk
- Henry Curchod
- Hettie Inniss
- Hetty Douglas
- Hsi-Nong Huang
- I.W. Payne
- Inez Valentine
- Iran do Espírito Santo
- Irini Bachlitzanaki
- Isa Genzken
- Ithell Colquhoun
- Jac Leirner
- Jack Pierson
- Jacqueline de Jong
- Jade de Montserrat
- James Fuller
- Jazz Grant
- Jen Hitchings
- Jeremy Hutchison
- Jeremy Olson
- Jermaine Gallacher
- Jesper List Thomsen
- Jesse Pollock
- Jessica Cannon
- Jesús Rafael Soto
- Jin Han Lee
- Jodie Carey
- Joe Sweeney
- John Baldessari
- John Madu
- John Minton
- Jonathan Callan
- Josef Kotzian
- Judith Bernstein
- Jungwon Jay Hur
- Kate Burling
- Kathryn Kerr
- Katrine Bobek
- Kavitha Balasingham
- Kehinde Wiley
- Kenturah Davis
- Kiki Kogelnik
- Kimathi Mafafo
- Kingsley Ifill
- Klodin Erb
- Kolja Kärtner Sainz
- Kristian Kragelund
- Larry Achiampong
- Laura Lancaster
- Laurence Sturla
- Leo Park
- Leonardo Devito
- Leslie Martinez
- Liliane Tomasko
- Lilly Fenichel
- Lisa Ivory
- Lisa Jahovic
- Lisa Liljeström
- Lucas Dupuy
- Luchita Hurtado
- Lucía Pizzani
- Luisen ZK
- Lydia Hamblet
- Lygia Clark
- Lygia Pape
- Lynda Benglis
- Madge Gill
- Magda Blasinska
- Magda Stawarska
- Marcus Jefferson
- Margaret Thompson
- Margarita Gluzberg
- Marie Jacotey
- Marieke Bernard-Berkel
- Mark Jackson
- Martin Aagaard Hansen
- Matt Bollinger
- Matthew Barney
- Max Boyla
- Max Pitegoff
- Max Wade
- Mellony Harvey
- Michela de Mattei
- Mira Schendel
- Miranda Keyes
- Mohammed Z Rahman
- Morten Knudsen
- N. Dash
- Nan Goldin
- Nancy Grossman
- Naomi Workman
- Narges Mohammadi
- Nathanael Amadou Kliebhan
- Neil Gall
- Nikolaj Schultz
- Nil Yalter
- Nina Davies
- Noel Anderson
- Otobong Nkanga
- Paloma Proudfoot
- Patrick Procktor
- Paula Morison
- Paula Rego
- Perle Fine
- Plum Cloutman
- Rameshwar Broota
- Raphaela Simon
- Rebeca Romero
- Regina Vater
- Renee So
- Richard Aldrich
- Richard Smith
- Robert Longo
- Robert Rauschenberg
- Roy Oxlade
- Ryan Huggins
- Sam Bakewell
- Sarah Bedford
- Scott Young
- Sean Savage Ferrari
- Sérgio de Camargo
- Shaan Bevan
- Shanti Panchal
- Sharon Walters
- Shimabuku
- Simon Whybray
- Simphiwe Ndzube
- Simphiwe Ndzube
- Sonja Sekula
- Sophie Bouvier Ausländer
- Sophie Goodchild
- Sophie Jung
- Stevie Dix
- Suyi Xu
- Tai Shan Schierenberg
- Tali Lennox
- Tanoa Sasraku
- Tesfaye Urgessa
- Thelonious Stokes
- Theresa Weber
- Thomas Cameron
- Tim Garwood
- Tim Kent
- Toby Christian
- Tom Bull
- Ty Locke
- Uri Aran
- Vicken Parsons
- Violet Dennison
- Waldemar Cordeiro
- Yi To
- Yiannis Maniatakos
- Yoan Capote
- Yuki Nakayama
- Yvonne Thomas
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- a. SQUIRE 3 Princeton Street London WC1R 4AX ChIJl09ejPcbdkgRq4qXyacNGao 51.51969188228435,-0.11702687436215342 a. SQUIRE was founded by Archie Squire in 2023. The gallery supports and promotes critical work by an international group of artists who offer prescient, historically rooted perspectives on our times.
- A.I. 1 Tenter Ground London E1 7NH ChIJFzPLfrQcdkgRnLiuQEwfsr0 51.51792,-0.076 Challenging the notions of East and West
- Ab-Anbar 34 Mortimer St London W1W 7JS ChIJKU3VZSobdkgRhaMyArqQ1do 51.51820343215132,-0.1398360597637053 Ab-Anbar opened in 2014 in Tehran with a mission to strengthen the position of contemporary art in Iran regionally and internationally, with a program centred around discovery and experimentation by thought provoking young as well as established artists. In 2020, Ab-Anbar moved its program to a temporary space in London, where this focus has been expanded, bringing a more significant presence for its artists internationally. Today with its new permanent space opening in Fitzrovia, the gallery’s primary goal is to work with young and established artists from many latitudes to expand the dialogue between collectors, museums and curators towards a...
- Addis Fine Art 21 Eastcastle St London W1W 8DD ChIJ77uDaNUadkgRs7vTNZmuiwQ 51.516959697674885,-0.13799883335946847 In 2016, Rakeb Sile and Mesai Haileleul co-founded Addis Fine Art, creating the first white-cube gallery space for modern and contemporary art in Ethiopia. Described as one of the 'Most Important Young Galleries in the World' (Artsy 2019), the gallery has since then grown to become one of the leading galleries in Africa, establishing a prominent international platform for artists from the Horn of Africa. In October 2021, the gallery moved into an expanded premises in London, a two-storey gallery space in the heart of Fitzrovia. The London gallery programme encapsulates Addis Fine Art’s commitment to heightened international exposure for,...
- Alice Amati 27 Warren Street W1T 5NB London ChIJVdDWnRkbdkgRwRuBL2IwTng 51.52379636683126,-0.14095755359554135 Alice Amati is a contemporary art gallery established in London in June 2023. The gallery is committed to fostering artists at the early stages of their career by often providing the opportunity for their first solo show in the city and a supportive context for artistic explorations and career development. Concerned with encouraging transnational dialogues around topical questions within society and art, Alice Amati brings together British and International artists through a challenging, experimental and rigorous exhibitions programme. Joining a cohort of young and established galleries in the burgeoning artistic scene of Fitzrovia, Alice Amati operates as a platform for...
- Alison Jacques 22 Cork St London W1S 3NG [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJNXZ4CysbdkgRU49vwfO68Jo 51.51025782367916,-0.14119082394354884 ALISON JACQUES HAS BUILT A REPUTATION FOR ITS CURATORIAL APPROACH AND PIONEERING COMMITMENT TO UNDER-ACKNOWLEDGED ARTISTS
- Alma Pearl Unit T, Reliance Wharf, 2-10 Hertford Road Main entrance on Kingsland Towpath, Regent’s Canal London N1 5ET [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJyWQwMZYcdkgR0yAier2Y25M 51.53696393168017,-0.07880251200352861 ALMA PEARL IS A CONTEMPORARY ART GALLERY IN EAST LONDON
- ALMINE RECH Broadbent House, Grosvenor Hill London W1K 3JH [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJbzTU7NUEdkgRTRi3BgddIHI 51.51136799866062,-0.1464839119929474 PARIS | NEW YORK | LONDON | BRUSSELS | SHANGHAI | MONACO
- Amanda Wilkinson Gallery 1st Floor, 47 Farringdon Road London EC1M 3JB ChIJc8Q9B04bdkgRn_1WU6rk90c 51.52033188012886,-0.10618142124364895 A gallery exhibiting International Contemporary art
- ANNKA KULTYS GALLERY Unit 9, 472 Hackney Road London E2 9EQ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJjfEKN8McdkgRCIZsMzRdpSc 51.531981,-0.057968 Presenting Contemporary Art and Digital Art
- Arcade Flat Time House 210 Bellenden Rd London SE15 4BW [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJI60vF5kDdkgRVanMhT0meYI 51.466101757197386,-0.07412820362349185 THINK GLOBALLY, ACT LOCALLY
- Arusha Gallery 6 Percy Street London W1T 1DQ ChIJeTKTQVMbdkgRiZf0wgeQJRM 51.51813088582747,-0.13368334662563447 Est. 2013, Arusha runs an annual programme of exhibitions, events and fairs
- Belmacz 45 Davies Street London W1K 4LX ChIJ3zTfiiwFdkgRT9kHo0Jme6Q 51.51133,-0.14766 A place for conversations
- Ben Brown Fine Arts 12 Brook's Mews London W1K 4DG ChIJpb3QnSsFdkgRLaG8-30MD0I 51.5125,-0.14617 International Modern and Contemporary Gallery in London, Hong Kong and Palm Beach
- Ben Hunter 44 Duke Street, St James's London SW1Y 6DD ChIJy80_dAUFdkgREmIGFMlVAQY 51.50733,-0.13777 Modern & Contemporary Art
- Bernheim 1 New Burlington Street London W1S 2JA ChIJ-5ksncgFdkgRlvIUe72p5a0 51.51204167859522,-0.14000595430636364 A SPACE FOR EMERGING VOICES AND COLLABORATIVE PROJECTS
- Berntson Bhattacharjee 45 Berners Street London W1T 3NE [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJkzKawj0PdkgRagUgldHNTcA 51.51801877393345,-0.13735308709676333 Berntson Bhattacharjee Gallery was founded in 2020 and is based in London with a satellite programme in Stockholm. We are dedicated to celebrating contemporary emerging artists. The gallery is dedicated to providing opportunities for collectors to support our diverse roster of highly talented artists at a pivotal moment in their careers. We nurture relationships with artists and keep their long term goals at the heart of everything we do. What once was a public car park has been transformed into our permanent residence at 45 Berners Street, breathing fresh life into the space. We take pride in being an integral...
- Bosse & Baum Unit DG.1, Ground Floor, Bussey Building Copeland Park, 133 Rye Lane London SE15 4ST [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ9YyvL6EDdkgR2LT24liUSU0 51.4699464216048,-0.06689966246902528 Bosse & Baum was founded in 2014 by Alexandra Warder and Lana Churchill. The gallery occupies a unit in the post-industrial Bussey Building, in Peckham, South East London. We are a commercial gallery seeking an active role in shaping art discourse by giving a platform to contemporary positions; representing an international roster of emerging artists whose work challenges dominant historical narratives and is socially engaged. We work to facilitate broader social access to art and contribute to the wider critical conversation on contemporary art through a public programme of exhibitions, talks and events.
- Brooke Benington 76 Cleveland Street London W1T 6NB ChIJR74Cnv4bdkgRw-s3Ka0siQg 51.52211041898266,-0.1399592217120012 Established in 2020, Brooke Benington presents an international, interdisciplinary programme across media
- Brunette Coleman 42 Theobalds Rd London WC1X 8NW ChIJvWRGmYsbdkgRREWBH06JprE 51.52116163867951,-0.11609898967129052 Founded in 2023 by Ted Targett and Anna Eaves, Brunette Coleman in Bloomsbury presents UK-based and international emerging contemporary artists with a focus on first presentations in London. In their first year Brunette Coleman staged three off-site exhibitions at Fitzrovia Chapel, The Shop Sadie Coles HQ in London and Shoot the Lobster in New York.
- Cardi Gallery London 22 Grafton Street London W1S 4EX ChIJH_MJiCkFdkgRxGXDi5p8kV0 51.5096,-0.14317 Cardi Gallery – originally ‘Galleria Cardi’ – was founded in Milan, Italy in April 1972 by Renato Cardi to foster the work of those modern and contemporary Italian artists that he had started to presciently collect in the late 1960s. Renato built a distinguished collection that included artists like Cy Twombly, Lucio Fontana, Piero Manzoni and many others, all relatively unknown at the time, and over the years acquired works ranging from Arte Povera to Spatialism. Thanks to both his inextinguishable passion for art and the subsequent success of Galleria Cardi, Renato earned a reputation as a critically engaged champion...
- Castor Holy Trinity, Cloudesley Square London N1 0HN ChIJlwu6SWgbdkgRyX2krLw_78E 51.53737337466196,-0.1081617234812062 Castor is a contemporary art gallery founded in 2016, now based at the historic Holy Trinity, a Grade 2 listed church on Cloudesley Square, Islington. Since inception Castor has focused on supporting emerging artists to realise ambitious presentations of their practice, often exploring social and personal narratives through sculpture, painting, video and installation. In recent years the gallery has worked with a number of estates and overlooked artists on survey exhibitions. Holy Trinity was constructed between 1827 - 29 and designed by Charles Barry, who was chief architect for the Houses of Parliament. Castor at Holy Trinity is split between...
- Cecilia Brunson Projects 3G Royal Oak Yard, Bermondsey Street London SE1 3GE ChIJBy0Tp1wDdkgRvhkfQi8fxwE 51.49907182517687,-0.08319558537547954 A leading Latin American Art Gallery in the UK and Europe
- Cedric Bardawil 1–3 Old Compton Street London W1D 5JB ChIJQ4l4atkFdkgRflzfGyUNMC0 51.51385420621435,-0.12973861533900335 EXHIBITING TODAY’S MOST EXCITING LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS
- Cooke Latham 41 Parkgate Road London SW11 4NP ChIJe50ItXcFdkgRcq6NX6whOiQ 51.47907,-0.16756 Cooke Latham Gallery is a contemporary gallery showcasing emerging and mid-career artists
- Copperfield 6 Copperfield Street London SE1 0EP ChIJ3fRvSKYEdkgRTl8yIMzWygE 51.50308,-0.097350 Contemporary art gallery focused on multidisciplinary, multi-media practices and international artists
- Corvi-Mora 1a Kempsford Road London SE11 4NU [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJoerTAZcEdkgRbB8dKi-aINU 51.491198060666896,-0.10839483680552986 Tommaso Corvi-Mora opened Corvi-Mora in 2000, after having run Robert Prime, in partnership with Gregorio Magnani, since 1995. The gallery was based in Warren Street until 2004, when it relocated to Kempsford Road, in Kennington. In the last 22 years, the gallery has hosted over 150 exhibitions and has developed long-term relationships with many artists, among them Brian Calvin, Richard Hawkins, Roger Hiorns, Jim Isermann, David Lieske, Jennifer Packer, Imran Qureshi, Tomoaki Suzuki, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, as well as working with younger artists, such as Jem Perucchini and Anika Roach.
- Cristea Roberts Gallery 43 Pall Mall SW1Y 5JG London ChIJf2OvPtcEdkgRQaAa_8a-TvE 51.505953,-0.136061 A leading gallery with an artist-led programme focused on original prints and works on paper.
- David Zwirner 24 Grafton Street London W1S 4EZ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ12aCiSkFdkgR6tDrrGh89WQ 51.50945,-0.143 Innovative, singular, and pioneering exhibitions
- domobaal 3 John Street London WC1N 2ES ChIJ8VGhoUkbdkgR8WAWa6jE4RU 51.52152,-0.11468 domobaal is a contemporary art gallery in central London, established in 2000. The gallery works with artists across all disciplines, including Ailbhe Ní Bhriain, Lothar Götz, Christopher Hanlon, Maud Cotter, Neil Gall and Nicky Hirst. To date, over 200 solo and group exhibitions have been presented in the space, alongside external and biennial projects. The gallery also runs an artists’ books and related ephemera publishing programme.
- Doyle Wham 91a Rivington Street London EC2A 3AY ChIJp6Z-cYUddkgRlVUN11SnK70 51.52690734619257,-0.07840094232835158 Doyle Wham is the UK's first and only contemporary African photography gallery. The gallery was founded in October 2020 with an itinerant programme of physical and digital exhibitions, as well as participations in art fairs such as Photo London and Abuja Art Week. As of March 2022, Doyle Wham has launched its first permanent location in Shoreditch, London. The gallery exhibits both emerging and established artists from Africa and across the African diaspora, with a focus on supporting early-career artists. To celebrate photography in all its forms, from traditional analogue photography to film, highlighting innovative and experimental expression is at...
- Edel Assanti 1B Little Titchfield St London W1W 7BU [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJj7HgCyAFdkgRHVblymM36Oc 51.5180870107134,-0.1408837961056436 Edel Assanti was founded in 2010 by Jeremy Epstein and Charlie Fellowes. Established in London, the gallery works with international artists whose practices engage with the social, cultural or political realities of the moment in which they live. Our programme’s tendency towards interdisciplinary, research-led work demonstrates how artists are uniquely positioned to witness and distill the complex narratives that define our era. Having been located in London’s Fitzrovia since 2014, in 2022 we opened our 4,000 square foot gallery in a renovated listed building on Little Titchfield Street. Our premises play host to a dynamic events programme in parallel to...
- Emalin 1 Holywell Lane EC2A 3ET London ChIJWQO2O7ccdkgRuJVEwdopw8g 51.52379,-0.07889 Emalin is a Shoreditch-based contemporary art gallery founded by Angelina Volk and Leopold Thun
- The Clerk’s House 118½ Shoreditch High Street E1 6JN London ChIJ-ZOtarocdkgRPO8H4EPXhBI 51.52678157657036,-0.07779782880047062 Emalin is a Shoreditch-based contemporary art gallery founded by Angelina Volk and Leopold Thun
- Flowers Gallery 21 Cork Street London W1S 3LZ ChIJO3vsBioFdkgRR97tlqC2qrc 51.5103,-0.14114 Since 1970 Flowers Gallery has represented international contemporary artists and estates, working with a wide range of media. Over the past five decades the gallery has presented more than 900 exhibitions across its global locations, also supporting the production of editions and publications, and installations at art fairs, public galleries, museums and institutions around the world. The gallery programme includes regular major survey shows and renowned recurring London exhibitions such as Artist of the Day and Small is Beautiful, which have formed significant platforms for emerging artists.
- Frith Street Gallery 17-18 Golden Square London W1F 9JJ ChIJG6VVRtQEdkgR_HO2kBguCts 51.511283,-0.137014 Frith Street Gallery has been a mainstay of London’s art community since 1989
- 28–29 Burlington Arcade, London W1J 0QJ ChIJgzwSBdYEdkgRtpphXP4Gg4Q 51.50836403835377,-0.1396166361089696 Gagosian's new London shop located in the historic Burlington Arcade in the heart of Mayfair launched in March 2022
- Gagosian Open 83 Charing Cross Road London WC2H 0AA ChIJ0co2fc0EdkgRAsU09acoAGU 51.5128526472396,-0.12915779572051278 The iconic site for the Gagosian Open presentation of 'Nan Goldin: Sisters, Saints, Sibyls' is a deconsecrated Presbyterian church in Soho known as the Welsh chapel. The Grade II–listed structure was built in 1888 by James Cubitt and served as an important religious and cultural site for London’s Welsh community before closing for worship in 1982. Since then, the landmark building has had many lives. Now home to Stone Nest, an arts organization that aims to bring exceptional and experimental art to the public, this architectural gem offers a space where audiences can encounter eclectic cultural programs. Gagosian’s temporary exhibition...
- Galerie Max Hetzler First Floor, 41 Dover Street London W1S 4NS [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJPR5ZLEIFdkgRfdSMQjS3Ndk 51.508072,-0.14205 Founded in 1974, Galerie Max Hetzler is a contemporary art gallery with spaces in London, Berlin and Paris
- Gallery 1957 1 Hyde Park Gate, South Kensington London SW7 5EW ChIJLc-xJG4FdkgROO7oR25OPzY 51.50127058010458,-0.180561594635899 GALLERY 1957 PRESENTS LEADING ARTISTS WORKING ACROSS WEST AFRICA AND THE DIASPORA
- Gallery Rosenfeld 37 Rathbone Street London W1T 1NZ ChIJ2UqfkSsbdkgRYLdZC0tJGlU 51.51819,-0.13513 The most talented artists, wherever in the world they are, we can find them
- GAZELLI ART HOUSE 39 Dover Street London W1S 4NN [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ380dwCkFdkgR5Q4CAbgKdfI 51.50832,-0.14237 Founded in 2010 by Mila Askarova, GAZELLI ART HOUSE in London brings a fresh perspective to Mayfair – through championing artists from all corners of the globe. Focusing on artists at the height of their practice, the gallery showcases their work through a diverse programme of exhibitions and events. Along with its sister site in Baku, GAZELLI ART HOUSE specialises in promoting art from Azerbaijan and its neighbours to introduce a greater understanding of the rich linguistic, religious and historical ties that connect these areas to international audiences. In 2015, the gallery further expanded to support artists working in digital...
- Goodman Gallery 26 Cork Street London W1S 3ND [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJgY5KDyoFdkgRrSxkK_eBFjc 51.510620,-0.141790 The leading, contemporary art gallery from the Continent, Goodman Gallery is located in Johannesburg, Cape Town and London. Established in 1966 as a non discriminatory space, during the Apartheid years it has been pivotal shaping contemporary African and African Diaspora art on the international scene. Goodman Gallery programme incorporates prominent and emerging, international artists whose work engages with African and post colonial contexts.
- greengrassi 1a Kempsford Road (off Wincott Street) London SE11 4NU [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ16FT2XIFdkgRN-jJ0or312c 51.49119334928858,-0.10840134247196023 greengrassi was opened in 1997 in London
- GRIMM 2 Bourdon St London W1K 3PA [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJoXRH-VoFdkgRP9rW4zJ13JU 51.511090590261496,-0.14692795767130137 GRIMM represents over thirty international artists with locations in Amsterdam (NL), New York (US), and London (UK). Since its establishment in 2005, it has been the gallery’s mission to represent and support the work of emerging and mid-career artists.
- Grosvenor Gallery 35 Bury Street London SW1Y 6AU [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJOfPErtcEdkgR9gzHF12HTvU 51.50653,-0.13834 Grosvenor Gallery was first established by the American sociologist and writer Eric Estorick (1913-1993) who began to collect works of art when he came to live in England after the Second World War. In the initial years, Eric and his wife developed a major collection of Italian art, which at one time was considered the most important collection of Italian art outside Italy. It was then that Estorick became a full time art dealer and went on to establish the Grosvenor Gallery in 1960, with its first premise on Davies Street. It was the largest and best equipped gallery in...
- Guts Gallery Unit 2, Sidings House, 10 Andre St Lower Clapton London E8 2AA [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJYbwwcekddkgRksxlDpYevSg 51.551531235186594,-0.06261456137175953 In an art world that’s scared to talk about inequality, Guts Gallery speaks up
- HackelBury Fine Art 4 Launceston Place London W8 5RL ChIJLdACJl8FdkgRmLfByZm88Uo 51.499168838311924,-0.18515812916343427 Established in 1998, HackelBury Fine Art is committed to nurturing long-term relationships with both artists and clients
- Hales Gallery 7 Bethnal Green Road London E1 6LA [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJT_2WdbccdkgRNTDjaWos-Mw 51.523658,-0.076643 Founded by Paul Hedge and Paul Maslin over 30 years ago, Hales opened in 1992 as a contemporary art space in Deptford, South London. In 2004 the gallery moved to the Tea Building, a dynamic and creative hub in London's East End on the border of Shoreditch and the business district. In February 2016 Hales opened a by-appointment office and viewing room in New York's Lower East side district, which as of September 2017 became the 'Hales Project Room', a space dedicated to hosting focused exhibitions that highlight specific artist projects and dialogues. In October 2018, Hales opened a primary...
- Hannah Barry Gallery 4 Holly Grove London SE15 5DF ChIJhVElBaEDdkgRNyZYXIZVGR8 51.46994,-0.07139 HANNAH BARRY GALLERY WAS FOUNDED IN 2007 AND IS BASED IN PECKHAM
- Haricot Gallery 2 Blackall Street London EC2A 4AD ChIJ9S6RB4EddkgRi9vy2d-grik 51.524880405504035,-0.08227186842781788 In February 2023, Haricot Gallery opened its doors at 2 Blackall Street, nestled in the heart of Shoreditch, East London. We are so excited to showcase the extraordinary works of the best emerging artists from all walks of life. Our exhibitions will feature works that reflect the world we live in, sometimes tackling political or radical subjects, and other times offering a fresh, exciting, and thought-provoking perspective. Beyond showcasing art, we strive to provide a platform for our artists to share their incredible stories, our responsibility is to ensure that each story is heard. We believe that engaging with art...
- Harlesden High Street 57 High Street, Harlesden London NW10 4NJ ChIJNaLDaBgbdkgR_0oYcElsoXQ 51.53603014574455,-0.24701265268631498 A BIPOC led space in an ungentrified spot in London
- Hauser & Wirth 23 Savile Row London W1S 2ET [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJH8uImtUEdkgRYqGByierv_o 51.51209,-0.14148 International contemporary and modern art gallery
- Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert 38 Bury Street, St James's London SW1Y 6BB [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ6-VgqNcEdkgRqO1cz5vaDaU 51.506746805635025,-0.13833813101212197 Modern and Contemporary British Art
- Herald St 2 Herald Street London E2 6JT ChIJozrofdAcdkgRAgL5jg5KBPk 51.52488,-0.05541 ESTABLISHED IN 2005, HERALD ST HAS TWO SPACES ACROSS LONDON AND REPRESENTS 25 INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS
- Herald St | Museum St 43 Museum Street London WC1A 1LY ChIJgRA2pzMbdkgRFKEaPTNodvA 51.51773786633067,-0.1254165971274178 ESTABLISHED IN 2005, HERALD ST HAS TWO SPACES ACROSS LONDON AND REPRESENTS 25 INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS
- Hollybush Gardens 1–2 Warner Yard London EC1R 5EY [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJGYR_zVEbdkgRC2Opnnvmc6c 51.523190,-0.111060 Hollybush Gardens was founded in 2005 by Lisa Panting and Malin Ståhl. Our backgrounds in curating, writing and teaching have informed our approach to the gallery and in 2013, after seven years in the East End, we moved to a larger building in Clerkenwell allowing us to expand our programme of events, performances and curated exhibitions. We remain committed to curating, in the production of discourse around artworks and in dialogue with artists, regularly publishing accompanying texts and ephemera and working on publications. Our programme of represented artists is intergenerational and inclusive, bringing highly regarded voices to the fore. Gallery...
- Holtermann Fine Art 30 Cork Street London W1S 3NG ChIJKf3RlBkFdkgR1yV72Nc-J2Y 51.51057941507376,-0.14155073950382283 Gallery dealing in international contemporary art with an emphasis on sculpture and sculptural installations
- Hot Wheels London 91 Great Russell Street London WC1B 3PS ChIJVdI6CnwbdkgRT4-4RLS3org 51.51801430034124,-0.1273378355810415 Hot Wheels Athens London is a contemporary art gallery established by Hugo Wheeler and Julia Gardener out of a neoclassical Athenian apartment. Its activities took shape through dialogue with artists and curators who were active in the city post-2017 (documenta 14), presenting exhibitions that center on critical, conceptual practices from Southeastern Europe and the Balkan region alongside resonant international positions. The gallery currently represents seven artists, all of whom maintain a multidisciplinary output outside of their visual arts practice, making active contributions towards curation, publishing, writing, music, design, fashion, or film. As of November 2023, Hot Wheels expanded to a...
- Ilenia 1A Old Nichol Street London E2 7HR [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJOy_YrDYddkgRaBr4pihGjUg 51.52504602872967,-0.07329872883236348 Ilenia is a London-based gallery exhibiting international contemporary artists
- IMT Gallery Unit 2/210 Cambridge Heath Road London E2 9NQ ChIJL61PhdwcdkgRzt3K6s8x5yc 51.531642484587024,-0.05648641348829015 CUTTING EDGE. INNOVATIVE. CRITICAL. ROARING SINCE 2005
- IONE & MANN First Floor, 6 Conduit Street London W1S 2XE ChIJn9NKruu3BSsRxhybAG6qUNo 51.51304011093425,-0.1413054878022499 IONE & MANN is a contemporary art gallery established in 2015
- JD Malat Gallery 30 Davies Street London W1K 4NB ChIJQwdiZCwFdkgRisrupv2UmDk 51.51205,-0.14762 JD Malat Gallery aims to promote its artists worldwide and provides collectors with the best art to suit their tastes
- Josh Lilley 40-46 Riding House Street London W1W 7EX [Wheelchair accesible] ChIJRXwZPyobdkgRYCr_XLbz_Cw 51.5188,-0.13975 Josh Lilley opened in Fitzrovia in May 2009, developing a reputation for both international debuts and sustained nurture of new British art. In 2020, after 90 exhibitions, the gallery expanded into adjoining premises to double it's exhibition space, viewing rooms and street facade, where it has continued it’s lineage of significant presentations by international artists.
- Kate MacGarry 27 Old Nichol Street London E2 7HR [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJU3l5RbccdkgR2arp0tj1PeE 51.524841,-0.07475 Kate MacGarry, founded in 2002, has expanded to represent 25 emerging and established artists - including two estates
- Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery 36 Tanner Street London SE1 3LD [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJq4n2OWsDdkgRPqs-rE_IX7M 51.50011006708083,-0.07907163495275583 FOR THOSE WHO COLLECT TOMORROW
- LAMB Gallery 32 St. George Street London W1S 2EA [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJY2qxBuUFdkgRAh-VjtAg55Q 51.51285454809267,-0.14298309204609216 Contemporary Art Gallery showcasing and representing British and Latin American artists
- Larkin Durey 13 Mason's Yard London SW1Y 6BU ChIJu1f-HiAFdkgRj_uSvQj463o 51.50776,-0.137 Larkin Durey represents contemporary artists from around the world
- Lévy Gorvy Dayan Empress Club, 35 Dover Street London W1S 4NQ ChIJT46f_ikFdkgRxR7BYOpKgmo 51.508725263552236,-0.14275140552618565 Helmed by Dominique Lévy, Brett Gorvy, and Amalia Dayan, Lévy Gorvy Dayan collaborates with artists, estates, non-profit organizations, foundations, and collections to increase the visibility of twentieth- and twenty-first-century works and artists—realizing seminal projects and furthering legacies. In forming Lévy Gorvy Dayan, the partners merge their respective specialties across twentieth- and twenty-first-century art, their reputations as leaders and tastemakers, and their separate backgrounds as principals of galleries with exemplary exhibition histories. Lévy Gorvy Dayan provides opportunities for education, exposure, and access to acquiring exceptional art through its museum-quality exhibition program and thoughtful participation in international art fairs.
- Lisson Gallery 27 Bell Street NW1 5BY London [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJbQXrurYadkgRysWRkIHUgz4 51.52093,-0.16948 Lisson Gallery is one of the most influential and longest-running international contemporary art galleries in the world
- Lisson Gallery 67 Lisson Street NW1 5DA London ChIJYSCuj7YadkgR6hnKHhTmJo4 51.52148,-0.16835 Lisson Gallery is one of the most influential and longest-running international contemporary art galleries in the world
- Luxembourg + Co. 2 Savile Row London W1S 3PA ChIJT4Bt6NUEdkgRUBQfm1YMdMo 51.510342,-0.13958 Luxembourg + Co. presents curated, museum-quality exhibitions of works by modern masters and contemporary artists
- Lyndsey Ingram 20 Bourdon Street London W1K 3PL ChIJM0cgvisFdkgRjSC7eQje4i4 51.51116,-0.145263 Founded in 2016, Lyndsey Ingram is located in a converted Victorian stable at 20 Bourdon Street in London’s Mayfair. With over twenty years of expertise in post-war and contemporary prints and work on paper - in particular 20th century British and American masters - the gallery continues to look forward and now represents artists working in all mediums, with a programme that includes painting, photography and sculpture. Lyndsey Ingram stages exhibitions that combine a deep knowledge and interest in important historic, graphic material, with work by contemporary and emerging artists. The gallery participates in major international art fairs, including The...
- MAMOTH 3 Endsleigh Street London WC1H 0DS ChIJeyspjrMbdkgRiqr8smmwvUw 51.525580,-0.130390 MAMOTH is a contemporary art gallery based in London, with an international profile, established in 2018 and dedicated to presenting contemporary art. Today the gallery collaborates with emerging and mid-career artists working in different media, approaches and genres.
- MASSIMODECARLO 16 Clifford St London W1S 3RG ChIJ2VXov9UEdkgRsR101JaPWTA 51.51089920217221,-0.1415713620666101 MASSIMODECARLO gallery was founded in 1987
- Maureen Paley 60 Three Colts Lane London E2 6GQ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJa0FEfNAcdkgRKrbjLXiIpwk 51.52461516555404,-0.05565873454348633 Maureen Paley is a long established art gallery and was amongst the first to present contemporary art in London’s East End. The gallery has been a pioneer of the current art scene, promoting a diverse range of established and emerging international artists. The gallery programme began in 1984 in a Victorian terraced house in London’s East End. It moved to larger expanded premises nearby in 1999 until present day. In July 2017 Maureen Paley opened a space in Hove called Morena di Luna, followed by Studio M in October 2020 located in Rochelle School, Shoreditch. From its inception the gallery’s...
- Maureen Paley: Studio M Rochelle School Friars Mount House 7 Playground Gardens London E2 7FA Studio M is located on the first floor with access via stairs only. Press the bell for Maureen Paley to gain access. ChIJ4XlnnasddkgRxAMBALi091o 51.52582572691471,-0.07383411741631431 Maureen Paley is a long established art gallery and was amongst the first to present contemporary art in London’s East End. The gallery has been a pioneer of the current art scene, promoting a diverse range of established and emerging international artists. The gallery programme began in 1984 in a Victorian terraced house in London’s East End. It moved to larger expanded premises nearby in 1999 until present day. In July 2017 Maureen Paley opened a space in Hove called Morena di Luna, followed by Studio M in October 2020 located in Rochelle School, Shoreditch. From its inception the gallery’s...
- Maximillian William, London 47 Mortimer Street London W1W 8HJ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJHaeOROobdkgRt6mAKsFunZg 51.51799,-0.13923 Maximillian William opened in Fitzrovia in 2019 and represents an international roster of contemporary artists. The gallery’s programme nurtures dialogues across generations and disciplines, working with artists both early-career and established, as well as with estates. Through close collaboration with artists on exhibitions, installations, events, and long-term projects, the gallery fosters a community of voices that attend to the social and cultural issues of their time. A commitment to publishing expands the programme beyond exhibitions, as well as a regular series of talks. In 2023, the gallery launched 'The Shelf', an events and bookshelf programme that shares space and conversation...
- Mazzoleni 15 Old Bond St London W1S 4AX [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJETdaA9YEdkgR-sI0VvrSguI 51.50907917527551,-0.14055562757361897 Mazzoleni is a leading Post-War Italian and contemporary art gallery based in London and Turin
- Michael Werner Gallery 22 Upper Brook Street London W1K 7PZ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ9fhWsTMFdkgR7p-TG5GX2Hg 51.51135,-0.15605 Since 1963, Michael Werner Gallery has worked with some of the most important European and American artists of the 20th Century
- Modern Art 7 Bury Street London SW1Y 6AL ChIJYVH7UtYEdkgR-ABIGPfwCLU 51.506901,-0.13853 Modern Art is a London based gallery opened by Stuart Shave in 1998
- Modern Art 4-8 Helmet Row London EC1V 3QJ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJmQ37-lcbdkgRBe9h9VyHodw 51.52493,-0.09441 Modern Art is a London based gallery opened by Stuart Shave in 1998
- mother's tankstation 58-64 Three Colts Lane London E2 6GP [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJixEkitAcdkgRlsAgvHndxbQ 51.52454,-0.05734 mother’s tankstation privileges the development of emerging and complex practices
- Nahmad Projects 2 Cork Street London W1S 3LB ChIJkQ1uESoFdkgR0mKmapJJZVU 51.51059869176204,-0.14185675377749446 Nahmad Projects is a modern and contemporary art gallery. It upholds a commitment to developing exhibitions that enhance our perspectives on art of the twentieth and twenty-first century. Projects are concept-driven, ranging from showcasing contemporary art, opening new dialogues on modern masterpieces, and provoking new conversations on artists rarely exhibited together.
- New Art Projects 357 City Road, London EC1V 1LR ChIJ3ebmu8IcdkgRXP3L-H9bWmQ 51.531330,-0.102730 New Art Projects, founded in 2015, is a contemporary art gallery situated in East London
- NiCOLETTi 12A Vyner Street London E2 9DG ChIJ-4lv2NEddkgRkd9hnJoHtzc 51.53431,-0.05609 NıCOLETTı is a London-based gallery dedicated to supporting the development of emerging artists
- NISO 110 New Cavendish Street London W1W 6XR ChIJ2acP4dUadkgRIAbMXDk4rj8 51.519988865261354,-0.14222220709465977 SUPPORTING EMERGING ARTISTS, REDISCOVERING UNDER-REPRESENTED MASTERS FROM THE XXTH CENTURY
- 9 Cork Street London W1S 3LL ChIJW-DTqfQFdkgRhr_0FIG8qY0 51.51035323607786,-0.14111930238934017 No.9 Cork Street is Frieze’s major new gallery in the historic heart of Mayfair in London
- Opera Gallery 65-66 New Bond Street London W1S 1RW [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJncInaysFdkgRXog0Vt3ppWs 51.51345840192983,-0.14547734812223234 OPERA GALLERY LONDON
- Pace 5 Hanover Square, London W1S 1HQ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJt_YFACoFdkgRMOBjy1dDHZw 51.51439983559076,-0.14290585397750932 Pace is a leading international art gallery representing some of the most influential contemporary artists and estates from the past century
- Palmer Gallery 15 Hatton Street, London NW8 8PL [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJdYf8-LAadkgRpNGImuTnwqc 51.523477197790385,-0.17330959556765616 NEW CONTEMPORARY ART GALLERY WITH A CROSS-DISCIPLINARY FOCUS
- Patrick Heide Contemporary Art 11 Church Street London NW8 8EE ChIJsWZhabcadkgRz6VfoJunjTU 51.52439,-0.16863 "ART DOES NOT REPRESENT WHAT WE SEE. IT MAKES US SEE" — Paul Klee
- Phillida Reid 10-16 Grape St London WC2H 8DY [Wheelchair accessible; no access to screening room] ChIJxxaHvvQbdkgR4b4zQRtbWic 51.51722327145957,-0.1259154405705626 Phillida Reid (formerly Southard Reid) was founded in 2010 by Phillida Reid and David Southard
- Pi Artworks London 55 Eastcastle Street London W1W 8EG [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJNx4N4SobdkgR9NynZiQyH9U 51.516472,-0.13812 International contemporary Art Gallery with spaces in London and in Istanbul
- Pilar Corrias 54 Eastcastle Street London W1W 8EF ChIJ5d__4CobdkgRbHKK4wsJncQ 51.51645,-0.13823 Since its inception, the gallery has worked with emerging and established artists with the central aim of allowing their work to grow both in terms of production of new projects and the making of new exhibitions. Pilar Corrias now represents a total of thirty-two international artists, two-thirds of whom are female.
- Pilar Corrias Savile Row 2 Savile Row London W1S 3PA ChIJVysGFKgFdkgRvL48M0d2bP0 51.51050674884801,-0.13949923091334637 Since its inception, Pilar Corrias has worked with emerging and established artists with the central aim of allowing their work to grow both in terms of production of new projects and the making of new exhibitions. Pilar Corrias now represents a total of thirty-two international artists, two-thirds of whom are female.
- Pipeline 35 Eastcastle St, London W1W 8DW [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJxxaHvvQbdkgR4b4zQRtbWic 51.51668918449341,-0.13902083093950918 Pipeline introduces each artist with a single artwork ahead of their exhibition. The gallery operates a divided space, a main exhibition area and a separate, enclosed area which features one work by the artist whose exhibition is forthcoming. This introductory work is selected by the artist to reveal particulars of their current practice or potentials for the future, providing essential context ahead of their exhibition. Pipeline is an exhibition and project space, founded in October 2022 by Tatiana Cheneviere. In response to the fast paced engagement with emerging artists today, Pipeline invites a slower experience in which to understand the...
- Pippy Houldsworth Gallery 6 Heddon Street London W1B 4BT [Wheelchair accessible; due to small lift cannot accomodate large-size wheelchairs] ChIJ610RjSQQdkgRylCcK-mzavc 51.511021,-0.13938 Pippy Houldsworth Gallery represents a diverse list of established and emerging artists, over three quarters of whom are women. Building strong relationships with public institutions on behalf of its artists is a cornerstone of its mission
- PM/AM 37 Eastcastle Street London W1W 8DR ChIJ63htsLUadkgRkbh0k_fTfwY 51.516527271351066,-0.13915455798064497 PM/AM is a contemporary art gallery located on the border of Soho and Fitzorovia in the heart of London. It hosts a busy programme of shows across the two exhibition floors of the Eastcastle Street space. The gallery’s lower ground floor studio provides the location for a residency space for international and under-represented artists to develop their practice. Together the spaces form a unique cultural and creative hub in the bustling centre of the city. PM/AM’s mission is to reflect through art how we engage with ourselves and the world today, expressed through the artists it is fortunate enough to...
- Project Native Informant 48 Three Colts Ln, London E2 6GQ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJB4ndfysFdkgRcV6CyO1hc6A 51.52495101804457,-0.056010077243879255 Contemporary art gallery established in 2013 with a strong interest in expanded institutional critique
- Public Gallery 91 Middlesex Street London E1 7DA [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJoc16XrMcdkgRsjQbkF9Cl0M 51.51567,-0.07575 Public is dedicated to supporting international emerging artists and promoting cross-cultural exchange
- RHODES 65 Great Portland Street London W1W 7LW ChIJ_x9RyDIbdkgR4YQhO_udTck 51.51799259545266,-0.14188402871279845 RHODES REPRESENTS AN INTERNATIONAL ROSTER OF CONTEMPORARY ARTISTS WITH A FORWARD-THINKING EXHIBITION PROGRAMME
- Richard Saltoun Gallery 41 Dover Street London W1S 4NS [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ_Ra8BdYadkgR8FNe79A8Zi0 51.508070,-0.142050 The gallery specialises in contemporary art, with an emphasis on feminist, conceptual and performance artists from the 1960s onwards
- Rose Easton 223 Cambridge Heath Road London E2 0EL ChIJSVrwidocdkgRnCHzrlZZdZw 51.52495,-0.05519320 Rose Easton opened in London in October 2021
- Saatchi Yates 14 Bury Street, St. James's London SW1Y 6AL [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJqzkzwgkFdkgRt0TNhex9A_U 51.51042,-0.14159 SAATCHI YATES REPRESENTS AND SHOWCASES EMERGING ARTISTS
- Sadie Coles HQ 8 Bury Street London SW1Y 6AB ChIJ9Y5C4LQFdkgRJf2iB76k-4g 51.506691,-0.138173 Sadie Coles HQ has been presenting exhibitions of new and established artists for over twenty-five years
- Sadie Coles HQ 1 Davies Street London W1K 3DB ChIJcSUFEiwFdkgRnP3KPDYn7ik 51.510578,-0.147565 Sadie Coles HQ has been presenting exhibitions of new and established artists for over twenty-five years
- Sadie Coles HQ 62 Kingly Street London W1B 5QN ChIJ5xSeFi4FdkgRFPDWnj8HqvQ 51.51219,-0.13889 Sadie Coles HQ has been presenting exhibitions of new and established artists for over twenty-five years
- Sadie Coles HQ The Shop, 62 Kingly Street London W1B 5QN [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJoYpeoNUEdkgRTMsqXKYBBvU 51.512780,-0.139470 243 Luz is delighted to present works by Calla Henkel & Max Pitegoff, and I.W. Payne at The Shop, Sadie Coles HQ from 31 May - 22 June 2024.
- Seventeen 270-276 Kingsland Road, Entrance on Acton Mews London E8 4DG ChIJR5gEeJYcdkgR9Ml9MFfvhoQ 51.53764,-0.07618 Seventeen exhibits works by emerging artists, with a particular focus on moving image. Founded in 2005 the gallery was initially located in Shoreditch and moved in 2014 into a larger, more versatile 3,000ft space in Dalston. The programme demonstrates a commitment to video, screen based work and experiments with new digital technologies. The majority of represented artists have a significant video and film component to their practice.
- Sherbet Green Unit 1, 2 Treadway Street London E2 6QW ChIJk8KQaKEddkgR6Blp-kkC1h4 51.531886778003454,-0.06019948831686435 Sherbet Green is a contemporary art gallery that opened in East London in 2022. It occupies the once-loading zone of the luggage company Boris Bags. The gallery's primary focus is to promote great artists, aiming to participate in creating space for outstanding, thought-provoking, and challenging art.
- Sid Motion Gallery 24a Penarth Centre, Hatcham Road London SE15 1TR ChIJpUMgkxUbdkgRJQORkdK7SQU 51.483775,-0.054716 South London galleries have, for many years now, given a platform to diverse emerging artists and new voices
- 6 Camberwell Passage Camberwell, London SE5 0AX [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJwx4TWKMFdkgRPpTuxllkmiA 51.47497600813144,-0.09406577309469093 Sim Smith hosts an ambitious programme focusing on bringing international artists’ work to London
- Skarstedt 8 Bennet Street London SW1A 1RP [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJwdmN_CkFdkgRjuNY-l_1d5Y 51.506859,-0.140760 SKARSTEDT IS A LEADING CONTEMPORARY ART GALLERY FOUNDED IN 1994 WITH LOCATIONS IN NEW YORK, LONDON AND PARIS
- Soft Opening 6 Minerva Street London E2 9EH [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJdXlCRMMcdkgRlwKZgO6dGBU 51.531520,-0.059530 EMERGING CONTEMPORARY IN EAST LONDON
- South Parade Griffin House, 79 Saffron Hill London EC1R 5BU ChIJMwfEW04bdkgRl_ND8c-7prA 51.52203937941198,-0.10817580130909338 South Parade is a contemporary art gallery dedicated to early and emerging career positions
- Sprovieri 23 Heddon Street London W1B4BQ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJVzVxk9UEdkgRHzHwf-aU9yo 51.51112,-0.13965 Contemporary Art Gallery
- Sprüth Magers 7a Grafton Street London W1S 4EJ ChIJr1tuKyoFdkgRtj8xjPUjTwg 51.50998,-0.14376 FOR FORTY YEARS, MONIKA SPRÜTH AND PHILOMENE MAGERS HAVE BEEN ACCOMPANYING, PROMOTING, AND SUPPORTING THE DEVELOPMENTS OF CONTEMPORARY ART
- Stephen Friedman Gallery 5–6 Cork Street London W1S 3LQ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJkdhECSoFdkgRgIRnx5Ilfc0 51.510435019567915,-0.14168000874283576 Founded in 1995, Stephen Friedman Gallery has a focus on representing exceptional artists from around the world
- Stern Pissarro 66 St. James's Street London SW1A 1NE [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJNXDQvtcEdkgR4IKYsZ-AKyQ 51.506061,-0.139101 Stern Pissarro Gallery specialises in Impressionist, Modern and Contemporary art as well as Camille Pissarro and his descendants
- Studio/Chapple Enclave 7, 50 Resolution Way, Deptford London SE8 4NT [wheelchair accessible] ChIJATwhy5YDdkgRPelgiH1jT-I 51.479068277157815,-0.02457878465772863 Studio/Chapple is a contemporary art gallery and project space in Deptford
- Sylvia Kouvali 12a Bourdon Street London W1K 3PG [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJHzfNstIEdkgR19VKxV2DRgY 51.51105,-0.14571 Sylvia Kouvali (formally Rodeo) opened in 2007 in Istanbul
- Tabula Rasa Gallery Unit One, 99 East Road London N1 6AQ [Wheelchair accesible] ChIJSSu8E6QcdkgRuprpGR3TTio 51.529150,-0.087340 A leading contemporary art gallery offering a platform for East and South-East Asian artists in Europe
- TAFETA 83 Charlotte Street London W1T 4PR ChIJ77uDaNUadkgRAycT0HZ98aU 51.52037648912067,-0.1368844677831436 20th Century & Contemporary African Arts
- Thaddeus Ropac 37 Dover Street London W1S 4NJ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJtRBZm0EFdkgRhZOb-yt9e4A 51.50852,-0.14252 Founded in 1983, Thaddaeus Ropac has galleries across Europe and Asia
- The Approach 47 Approach Road London E2 9LY ChIJ315Pt94cdkgR_rac7r19pbM 51.53194,-0.05074 Located in Bethnal Green above The Approach Tavern, for over twenty years The Approach has operated an internationally recognised programme from its East London base. Founded in 1997, The Approach is co-directed by Jake Miller and Emma Robertson. The gallery is known for discovering artists and establishing their careers as well as making inter-generational curated group shows a strong focus. Over the years the gallery has operated parallel programmes in additional gallery spaces in London’s West End (The Approach W1) and in Shoreditch (The Reliance). The gallery is currently based in its original East End location and continues to expand...
- The Gallery of Everything 4 Chiltern Street London W1U 7PS [Upstairs wheelchair accessible] ChIJBdylvs0adkgR7FnvJyIXLYQ 51.51964,-0.1552 Historic and contemporary art from beyond the mainstream, including art brut, non-academic art and all forms of outsiderism.
- The Mayor Gallery 9 Bury Street London SW1Y 6AB [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJR6gOByoFdkgREc-IRJwEoQE 51.50696342735305,-0.13833221229663678 Founded in 1925, specialised in Post-War Art, focused on International Pop, Zero and Concrete Art
- The Sunday Painter 117-119 South Lambeth Road London SW8 1XA ChIJaw37xaEDdkgR6NdiGEgLGr8 51.47915978,-0.1232644863 Harry Beer and Will Jarvis established The Sunday Painter in 2009 as an artist-run project space to show the work of their friends and peers. Conceived while the founders were art students at the Chelsea College of Arts and the Camberwell College of Arts, the gallery was originally located in a disused function room of a local pub in Peckham. In 2014, The Sunday Painter found a permanent space and transitioned to a commercial gallery model. Since then, the gallery has been exhibiting work by a cross- generational group of artists from the UK and abroad. The Sunday Painter’s origins...
- Thomas Dane Gallery 3 & 11 Duke Street, St James's London SW1Y 6BN [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJVTcd_dYEdkgRcF5eHLcFAEQ 51.506808,-0.13714 Thomas Dane Gallery is a contemporary art gallery founded in 2004
- Timothy Taylor 15 Bolton Street London W1J 8BG ChIJF5GpAykFdkgR7sVeknjg4Dg 51.5071,-0.14438 Timothy Taylor is a modern and contemporary art gallery in Mayfair
- Tiwani Contemporary 24 Cork Street London W1S 3NG ChIJc18dgiobdkgR_ykPWv92zWI 51.51033263451383,-0.14124045655943107 CONTEMPORARY GALLERY REPRESENTING ARTISTS FROM AFRICA AND THE GLOBAL DIASPORA
- TJ Boulting 59 Riding House Street London W1W 7EG ChIJy6AvPCobdkgRVEwcvVdoVxY 51.519261,-0.13993 Contemporary art, historic building
- Trafalgar Avenue 29 Trafalgar Avenue, London SE15 6NP ChIJW9uGrm0DdkgRnnVonX9717I 51.48590254112126,-0.07387735933547142 Trafalgar Avenue is a contemporary art gallery and project space in South East London
- Union Pacific 15 West Central St London WC1A 1JJ ChIJQ7w9Nv4bdkgRc-90NLgLi7g 51.51696676761996,-0.12532585487671502 Union Pacific is a contemporary art gallery based in London, representing challenging and ambitious new artworks and artists. It was founded in 2014 by Grace Schofield and Nigel Dunkley, with the quest of exhibiting emerging international artists in London.
- Union Pacific 17 Goulston Street London E1 7TP ChIJBTBdlrQcdkgRfiZFCyZOCoY 51.51622605096252,-0.07493237484204683 Union Pacific is a contemporary art gallery based in London, representing challenging and ambitious new artworks and artists. It was founded in 2014 by Grace Schofield and Nigel Dunkley, with the quest of exhibiting emerging international artists in London.
- Unit London 3 Hanover Square London W1S 1HD [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJkaCd6SoFdkgRSNU5OzAN1x8 51.513540,-0.143490 EXPANDING THE AUDIENCE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, IN ALL ITS FORMS, REMAINS THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND THE GALLERY’S MISSION AND WE ARE PROUD TO TAKE AN ACTIVE STANCE IN SUPPORTING AND REPRESENTING IMPORTANT AND TALENTED ARTISTS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD
- Vardaxoglou Gallery 7 Royalty Mews (Dean Street), Soho London W1D 3AS ChIJOdno8-kFdkgRlyz6-J76sHc 51.514145844265954,-0.13263780014329785 Established in 2020, Vardaxoglou is a London-based gallery specialising in modern and contemporary art
- Victoria Miro 16 Wharf Road London N1 7RW [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ28bNtlgbdkgR1yXFqkfZR0I 51.5325,-0.09668 Founded in 1985, Victoria Miro earned acclaim for showing the work of established and emerging international contemporary artists
- Vigo 7/8 Masons Yard, St. James's London SW1Y 6BU ChIJpaPVRysFdkgRLpQzkn9KELU 51.507923966903284,-0.13721182864788206 Contemporary Art Gallery
- VITRINE, 38 Riding House Street, London W1W 7ES [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJqYKjPyobdkgR4Qh6EsS05Co 51.51911582487069,-0.13946475949600232 VITRINE is focused on artistic experimentation and emerging interdisciplinary practices
- VITRINE Bermondsey 15 Bermondsey Sq London SE1 3UN [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJJ3IQsEQDdkgRXlBOx8q4ea8 51.49750504156572,-0.08034889825381279 VITRINE is focused on artistic experimentation and emerging interdisciplinary practices
- Waddington Custot 11 Cork Street London W1S 3LT [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJIwPFBCoFdkgRiWOzQqJ23II 51.510213,-0.141436 Waddington Custot is an art gallery specialising in modern and contemporary art, based on London's historic Cork Street
- White Cube 144 -152 Bermondsey Street London SE1 3TQ [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJZ7MvVFsDdkgRFhq0B3Yl8Wo 51.49936,-0.08238 White Cube’s exhibition programme extends across locations in London, Hong Kong, Paris, New York, Seoul and online. Since its inception in 1993, the gallery has exhibited the work of many of the world’s most highly acclaimed contemporary artists.
- White Cube 25 -26 Mason's Yard London SW1Y 6BU [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJj18fOtAEdkgRroT7k7wG8kI 51.50743,-0.13744 White Cube’s exhibition programme extends across locations in London, Hong Kong, Paris, New York, Seoul and online. Since its inception in 1993, the gallery has exhibited the work of many of the world’s most highly acclaimed contemporary artists.
- Workplace 50 Mortimer Street London W1W 7RP [Wheelchair access on ground floor. Lower floor has no wheelchair access] ChIJBSwmpdkbdkgRtsnr_SnhAQA 51.51804155811775,-0.14071302731921428 WORKPLACE is a commercial gallery based in London and Newcastle
- Xxijra Hii Enclave 4, 50 Resolution Way London SE8 4AL [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ74YP34QDdkgR6HsTmmhJcOM 51.47852803,-0.02491173649 A CONTEMPORARY ART GALLERY IN DEPTFORD
- Yamamoto Keiko Rochaix 19 Goulston Street London E1 7TP ChIJBTBdlrQcdkgRoDqN77xTSMQ 51.51613920498902,-0.07497565925463374 local yet cross-cultural
- ZÉRUÌ Unit 10, Vanguard Court Entrance via Vanguard Court on Peckham road London SE5 8QT [Wheelchair accessible] ChIJ0yp4MAoDdkgRXQGJYVbpbyc 51.47213973576501,-0.0812836154194709 ZÉRUÌ is a contemporary art gallery in Camberwell, London
- greengrassi is pleased to present new works by Vincent Fecteau.
- 100 Acres is the first solo exhibition of Canadian cultural theorist, political philosopher and artist, Erin MANNING in the UK and at a private gallery, featuring an interactive, site-specific installation encompassing the entire gallery, composed of two twenty-five yard cuts of monks cloth that are sewn, embroidered, knotted and tufted.
- Josh Lilley is pleased to present 40 Knots and How to Tie Them, the inaugural exhibition of US-based artist Autumn Wallace (b. 1996, Philadelphia, PA). Taking its title from an instructional rope-binding book, Wallace draws an analogy between the complex and intricate nature of knots and relational dynamics; two systems of codependence that are reliant on friction, and which, when formed, become weight-bearing masses. The analogy forms an entry point to Wallace’s macrocosm, populated by a web of interconnected characters who give way to a rigorous re-interpretation of value systems, identity politics and institutional hierarchies. Cast in neo-mythologic vignettes, Wallace’s...
- Georg Baselitz marks his return to White Cube Bermondsey for the first time in eight years with the solo exhibition ‘A Confession of My Sins’. Comprising a large body of new work produced during an intensive year in the studio, the exhibition features large-scale paintings and a selection of works on paper in which the artist, now 86, surveys the past six and a half decades of his practice. From the vantage point of old age, Baselitz reflects upon a lifetime of lived experience and artistic invention, paying homage to key inspirations, motifs and subject matter, as well as unearthing...
- A Flame is a Petal is Mohammed Z. Rahman’s second solo exhibition at Phillida Reid, including new large and small scale paintings, along with new sculptural installation. The exhibition is a meditation on the love and community at stake in an early apocalyptic context marked by social polarisation and ecological destruction. Utilising the symbolism and chromatics of fire and flowers, Rahman explores themes of revolutionary love through memories, dreams, objects and tributes to community. The title is inspired by the yogic practice of trataka meditation which involves watching a candle flame to focus the mind, which Rahman interprets as seeing...
- Harminder Judge’s A Ghost Dance is a single exhibition of new work across both Matt’s Gallery and The Sunday Painter in South London. Located just 10 minutes walk from each other, the two spaces are pleased to present an exhibition in two parts. The galleries have worked collaboratively to help Judge realise a new body of work that brings the artist’s wall-based plaster pieces into dialogue with new developments with free standing and floor-based sculptures. A Ghost Dance references funeral rites, processions and the presence of ghosts and spirits. It draws on persistent themes in Judge’s work: life, death, ritual...
- ‘A Journey into the Unknown’ brings together eight abstract painters in London. 'To us art is an adventure into an unknown world, which can be explored only by those willing to take risks.' — Adolph Gottlieb and Mark Rothko (with the assistance of Barnett Newman), Letter to Edward Alden Jewell, Art Editor, The New York Times, 7 June 1943 In June 1943, Adolph Gottlieb and Mark Rothko exhibited their new paintings in an exhibition of the Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors. Edward Alden Jewell, a senior critic at the New York Times, gave a lukewarm review of the show,...
- NISO is pleased to announce a solo presentation of works by acclaimed British painter Patrick Procktor RA (1936-2003) curated by art critic and curator Ophelia Sanderson. In line with the gallery’s ongoing commitment to resurfacing esteemed XXth Century artists whose contributions have been significantly overlooked, 'A Life in Watercolour: Patrick Procktor and the Swinging Sixties' reveals a curation of works attesting to the artist’s unique mastery of the medium, claiming him as one of the leading watercolourists of his generation and a seminal figure of London's Swinging Sixties art scene.
- A.I. is pleased to present ' After the Rain' , a solo exhibition comprising new works including paintings, sculptures and a site-specific installation by Yuki Nakayama. This is the artist’s debut exhibition with the gallery. 'After the Rain' explores the dynamic relationship between space, play and decision-making in emphasising how spatial elements influence our actions and outcomes. For the realisation of this project, the artist responded to the architecture of the gallery space and in particular, its subterranean swimming pool manifesting in larger-than-life structures and sculpted mounds of playground sand set against a five metre topographical painting.
- Over the last thirty years, American artist and filmmaker Harmony Korine has cultivated a multidisciplinary practice built upon tireless experimentation. A second chapter to Korine’s 2023 exhibition, ‘AGGRESSIVE DR1FTER’, at Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles, this exhibition in London features a series of paintings drawn from his newly released film ‘Aggro Dr1ft’, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2023 and was notably shot using infrared cameras. The exhibition’s acid-hued oils display an unprecedented fusion of Korine's painting and filmic practices. These hallucinatory works, like his films, blur the boundaries between ‘high’ and ‘low’ in ways that simultaneously attract...
- John Baldessari, a pioneer of American Conceptualism, continually challenged clichés and explored the expectations that shape how we perceive works of art. Throughout his storied and influential career, his distinctive approach to painting, photography, source images and texts recontextualized art-historical narratives and rejected traditional boundaries. Drawing from a breadth of sources – advertising, film culture, Marcel Duchamp, and Ludwig Wittgenstein – he created absurdist, complex yet accessible juxtapositions. Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are pleased to present Ahmedabad 1992, a solo exhibition of an alluring series of mixed media assemblages Baldessari produced during his residency in India. For the first...
- Celebrating its 30th anniversary, Gasworks presents a selection of editions by alumni artists from the organisations’ programmes. Hosted by David Zwirner and coinciding with London Gallery Weekend, the exhibition offers artwork for sale to raise funds and support the future of Gasworks’ Residencies, Exhibitions and Participation Programming. All the Lovers reunites alumni from the last three decades of Gasworks’ programmes, led by a series of Anniversary Editions by Hew Locke (Founding Artist and Studio Holder, 1996-2003), Sin Wai Kin (Studio Holder, 2018-2023) and Francis Offman (Residency Artist, 2023) which will be shown publicly for the first time. The exhibition will...
- All the world’s a stage is the second solo exhibition at the gallery from Marieke Bernard-Berkel (b. 1988, France), featuring new paintings on wood, canvas and fabric by the artist, alongside several tar-coated sculptural works from invited collaborator Tom Bull. This new body of work continues Bernard-Berkel’s investigation into landscape painting. Building on multiple canonical references, including expressionism, post-impressionism and psychedelic art, she utilises wild, overabundant colourways and impasto to convey a contemporary lens on the medium. The paintings begin with small drawings or photographs from books of predominantly-European countryside views, which the artist then paints over extended periods of...
- ‘Angel with a Gun: Homage to Guy Brett’ presents rarely seen works from the private collection of legendary and pioneering British critic, curator and writer Guy Brett (1942-2021). A distinctive voice in art criticism since the 1960s, Brett followed an independent path, mapping and interpreting contemporary art. Through his collection, we encounter Brett’s constant curiosity and insight accompanied by complete disinterest in a market-led view. Focusing on Brett’s discovery of, and passion for Latin American art, this exhibition showcases the work of 12 artists from Brazil, Chile and Venezuela whom he invited to Europe for the first time. Their future...
- In our Museum St premises at the heart of the Bloomsbury contemporary gallery scene, we will present a new body of work by Berlin-based photographer Annette Kelm.
- ‘Anthropophonia’ is an installation representing a cosmic entanglement of sound and fabric that embodies resilience through darkness. Set within the infinite of the deep sea, aquatic mythology and sonic dark matter collide to interrogate spaces that can neither be suppressed or fully understood. As the site of the source of all life, one discovers here beauty and healing in the power of the unknown. Anthropophony consists of the Greek ‘Anthropos’ - meaning human, and ‘phoni’ - meaning voice, ultimately suggestive of all sound produced by humans. A soundscape with healing frequencies envelops a network of blue textile - a nostalgic...
- MAMOTH is delighted to announce ‘Apparitions’, the London debut of New York-based artist Suyi Xu which will be on show from the 17th of May until the 22nd of June 2024
- In his gentle, reticent way, Rameshwar Broota has long been a commanding presence on the Indian art scene. His paintings communicate the same combination of a contemplative stillness with an aura of monumentality, even when his imagery and techniques are anchored in conditions of anxiety, anguish, trauma or catastrophe. […] At first, breathtaking glance, Broota’s abstract paintings – made between 2020 and 2023 – enthrall us with what can only be described as their spartan sumptuousness. Austerely created through the artist’s scratch technique – he only ever uses Bharat shaving razor blades, each one broken in half in a special...
- Goodman Gallery is delighted to present Atta Kwami’s first solo show with the gallery since announcing joint representation with Beardsmore Gallery earlier this year. This exhibition presents a selection of paintings which Kwami made over the last twenty years, showing the breadth of his practice and highlighting the late artist as one of the most important African abstract painters of the 20th century. With a career spanning forty years, Kwami was a distinguished artist, art historian and curator, living and working between the UK and his home country, Ghana. His colourful works of vibrant geometric patterns are inspired by a...
- Emalin is pleased to present ax-d. us. t, Adriano Costa’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. The artist’s project draws on the context of the historical Clerk’s House, where the exhibition unfolds, as well as the cemetery grounds of St Leonard’s Church on which the house stands and whose tombstones are built into its walls. With this as his starting point, Costa engages the built and the historical with his sculptural vocabulary that makes tangible the transmutation of value into base material, of life into spirit and of body into dust. The exhibition’s title, ax-d. us. t, is a wordplay...
- Becoming the Edit will introduce the fourth fictional dance by artist Nina Davies. As with Nina’s previous work, this work will continue to consider the dances of today as if they were traditional dances of the future. This show will continue to expand the world Davies has been building for the past two years, a world where people move in ways that mimic their technological environments. A central video work in show is narrated by two characters on a podcast discussing a trial where someone is accused of committing a crime based on generated video evidence, the evolving legal market,...
- Arcade and Flat Time House are pleased to present a new exhibition with Can Altay (Turkey, 1975). Through drawing, sculptural propositions and the presentation of research, Altay speculates how access to water can act as a model towards a more regenerative public space. Central to this presentation is a large-scale sculptural intervention, filling Flat Time House’s rear gallery that acts as a proposal for a rainwater-harvesting drinking fountain. At this moment where water and its processing has become a subject of prevalent political dialogue, this exhibition provokes a conversation around our environment and who cares for it.
- 'Before Freedom Pt. 2' will feature new work made in 2024, drawing inspiration from the fertility of the land and the verdancy of spring in Palestine. Questioning history, memory, space, politics and reality itself, Adam Rouhana leverages photography to challenge the temporalities of a supremacist regime of visuality. Assembling geopolitical, socio-cultural and historical awareness into aesthetic formations, this exhibition argues for expanding notions of subjectivity - self-consciously scrutinizing dominant transhistorical representations and presenting an alternative. Whether you are seeing children playing football, friends and family swimming together, streetlife or images of natural life, this work is a description of the...
- Soft Opening is pleased to present 'being alone', Dean Sameshima's first solo exhibition at the gallery.
- Carl Kostyál is delighted to present ‘BEYOND PLEASURE’ by Swedish artist Leo Park. This is the artist’s debut exhibition with the gallery. The paintings comprising Beyond Pleasure explore new technical and formal shifts. The laid-out perspective and depth can only be articulated through painting and couldn’t be realized in three-dimensional space or captured in a photograph. A similar concept is used for the central motif, its tattoo-like embellishments, or how the elements of the natural surroundings are rendered, with Hirst or Pointillism-like spots depicting sand grains in an almost Pop Art-like way, for example. In the end, every aspect of...
- Filled with unexpected juxtapositions and clever visual puns, ‘Beyond Surrealism’ unfolds as a compelling exploration of the impact of Surrealism on the 100 years that followed the publication André Breton's Manifesto in 1924.
- Alma Pearl is pleased to present 'BLCKGEEZER: Black Nausea / 24', the artist's debut solo exhibition after graduating from the Royal College of Art in 2023. The recipient of Sir Frank Bowling Scholarship (2022-2023) as well as the Chadwell Award 2023, BLCKGEEZER here invokes black as a material, a state, a colour, a mood concept, and site of abstraction. Following the experience of personal illness, BLCKGEEZER expands on and develops an extensive engagement with the writings of Jean Paul Sartre and Franz Fanon importantly shot through the prism of Lola Olufemi’s powerful Experiments in Imagining Otherwise, which the author positions...
- White Cube Mason's Yard is pleased to present ‘Boombox’, an exhibition of new paintings by Danica Lundy. In her second exhibition with the gallery, the artist explores structures of power and how these inform and determine the fabric of the everyday – their influence over our bodies, our relationships and how they permeate our industries and social strata. Lundy’s detail-laden, panoptical compositions draw on daily events, subjecting them to the scrutiny of an augmented lens. Employing shifting perspectives, merging images and manipulating proportions, a poetic framework for these typically quotidian scenes emerges in which the familiar makes room for the...
- Victoria Miro is delighted to present exhibitions by Boscoe Holder and Geoffrey Holder. Shown in tandem for the first time, exhibitions by Boscoe (1921–2007) and his younger brother Geoffrey (1930–2014) foreground the siblings as painters against the significance of their achievements in theatre, dance, and film. Born in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, Boscoe and Geoffrey Holder were true polymaths whose groundbreaking careers in the visual and performing arts led them individually to the UK, where Boscoe settled in 1950, and the US, where Geoffrey made his home in 1953, and to wider international acclaim. Together the exhibitions draw...
- MASSIMODECARLO is delighted to announce 'Bulge', American artist Hannah Levy’s debut solo exhibition with the gallery and in London. Levy’s metal, glass, and silicone sculptures are like forbidden fruits, tempting the viewer as danger looms. Reminiscent of home or office furniture, hardware, prosthetics, as well as human flesh and food, the works expose a latent anxiety as function is removed from form, revealing themselves to be uncanny and otherworldly. Drawing from the gallery’s architecture, dating back to 1723, Levy leans into and pushes against the space’s decorative accents and historically preserved green-painted walls. Tripod-legged, bulbous humanoids, glass wall sconces punctured...
- In her ambitious new exhibition for Cooke Latham, Fani Parali invites viewers into an alternate realm, a space designed for and inhabited solely by children. Through this inversion of our own reality Parali, like all truly great purveyors of science fiction, not only looks ahead reflecting upon the challenges facing the next generation but also invites critical analysis of our societal status quo. For 'Children of the Future' Parali has installed an intricately painted floor that covers the gallery like a second skin. Inspired by stellar constellations, neural pathways and industrial blueprints this becomes the unapologetically theatrical 'stage' upon which...
- Stephen Friedman Gallery is pleased to present clouds, Kenturah Davis’ debut solo exhibition in the UK. The drawing series that comprise this show are united by a common text—an essay penned by Davis that explores perception as an expressive and existential state. The artist’s writing flows through themes of dance, African diaspora, musical notation, literature, Egyptian hieroglyphs, and theoretical physics, invoking the guiding voices of the choreographer Katherine Dunham, composer Florence B. Price, theorist Saidiya Hartman, author Toni Morrison, and physicist Carlo Rovelli. Each of Davis’ bodies of work is a study in movement that translates photographs taken by the...
- Our East London location will feature an exhibition by Cole Lu, encompassing sculpture as well as ‘paintings’ made of burnt wood and linen panels. This will be Lu's first solo presentation with the gallery.
- Charlotte Birnbaum is a renowned culinary historian and the creator of celebrated sculptural artworks for the table. She acted as the editor of the book series On the Table and has authored numerous publications on gastronomical themes, such as baroque napkin folding and royal banquets. Her notable literary works include The Meal: A Conversation with Gilbert & George, giving an account of the dinner party hosted by the artists duo, featuring David Hockney as the guest of honour. In celebration of our upstairs exhibition, Birnbaum will curate a feast downstairs, incorporating a selection of her Plateaux – decorative objects for...
- Maureen Paley is pleased to present a new exhibition by Daniel Correa Mejía, who was born in Medellin, Colombia and lives and works in Berlin, Germany. Following his inclusion in the group exhibition outer view, inner world (2023) held at Morena di Luna, Hove, last summer, this will be his first solo exhibition with the gallery, presented at Studio M in Shoreditch London. Correa Mejía uses vivid colours to crystallise a dreamlike world of unfamiliar landscapes and celestial bodies. His highly symbolic figures personify existential concerns, uncovering collective knowledge and visualising a return to the primal fact of existence. Whilst...
- Over the last 40 years Singh has created pioneering works that cross genres, explore the boundaries of photography and expand our perception of the photographic image. She liberates the medium from its traditional places, creating interconnected bodies of work replete with both poetic and narrative possibilities. To create these, Singh draws on her extensive and ongoing pictorial archive that is constantly in motion and continuously refined. This show explores in part the intersection of photography and architecture, it includes a major series of wall-based pieces as well as a structural installation.
- Consisting of video, sculpture and live performance, this show presents a new chapter in Hutchison’s expansive work, Dead White Man. This ongoing body of work deals with the global trade in secondhand clothes. Every year, twenty-four billion garments are donated to charity: the majority are shipped to the African continent. Most are sold in street markets, but forty percent are dumped on mountains of landfill. In Ghana, they are known as ‘obroni wawu’, Dead White Men’s Clothes. In each chapter of this ongoing work, Hutchison performs the Dead White Man. Mobilising his own subject position - a white Western male...
- Born in Tehran, Parham Ghalamdar's influences lie in Iranian myths and the changing natural landscape of the Middle East. For Ghalamader, Iranian mythology hinges on two elements: water and soil. Ancient myths would often tell of Iranian heroes defending the unity of the elements to protect the land from drought. The works presented in his solo exhibition Deep Desert Objekt are born of these sacred, deteriorating lands. Black paint from the scorched earth of Iraq finishes the surface of Ghalamdar’s paintings and demon head ceramics. His ceramic vases, oozing with a thick tar like glaze, hold within them dry terrains...
- Each of the artists in this group exhibition uses painting as a kind of portal: to a deeply personal yet otherworldly realm, as in the paintings of Katrine Bobek and the work of Adele Rannes, or surreal visions of urban culture, such as Carl Mannov’s. Martin Aagaard Hansen excavates the unknown beneath these urban surfaces, Morten Knudsen’s abstract works communicate sights indescribable through language, and Anna Kristine Hvid Petersen depicts narrative scenes similar to– but not quite the same as– reality.
- 243 Luz is delighted to present works by Calla Henkel & Max Pitegoff, and I.W. Payne at The Shop, Sadie Coles HQ . With its back to Regent Street, the location of The Shop at Sadie Coles grounds this duo exhibition in the deep historical narratives surrounding urbanity, consumer culture, intimacy, and the interplay between public and private spaces. Henkel and Pitegoff’s worn handbag interiors can be read as proxies for a cultural imaginary born out of capital’s capture of identity and a kind of Debordian conspicuous consumption. Their erotic charge references the vernacular of online secondary markets for luxury...
- Yamamoto Keiko Rochaix is pleased to announce Drift, the gallery’s second solo exhibition with Magda Stawarska. Stawarska presents one of her most ambitious solo presentations to date, showcasing ten new works across various media. Split across the gallery’s two floors, each with distinct installation, Drift presents viewers with a spellbinding view of the visual rhythms that constitute the ebb and flow of various cityscapes. Through painting and photography; etching, silkscreen print and slide projection, Stawarska reveals how one fashions a personal relationship to place—layering histories of memory and movement, absence and restitution via patterns that wrap horizontally and vertically across...
- It is of the artist’s interest the thought about the concepts of prison and escape, searching the symbolic (and historical) space of the Brazilian prisons from an outsider’s point of view, from those who experience confinement (social-economic and psychological) from the outside, the daily boundaries, projecting at the same time, from inside its aesthetical exercise, an escape route.
- 'Nude Me/Under the Skin: Dark Stars', ushers in a new chapter in Gbewonyo’s Nude Me series that begins to explore African spirituality and cosmology. Inspired by the written texts of the likes of Malidoma Patrice Some and Zulumathabo Zulu this series delves into ancient African belief systems. As with the previous Nude Me iterations the body of work also emotes the personal with Gbewonyo’s maternal grandmother being a starting point. The artist imagines herself being able to traverse the physical plane and explore multitude realms. In the ancestral, she returns to her grandmother’s bosom, opening a channel to the long...
- Shanti Panchal’s (b.1951) exhibition Endurance opens at the gallery with a reception on Thursday 9 May from 6 - 8 pm. The exhibition runs from 10 May – 2 June 2024 and features works from 1989 – 2022. The exhibition is also a part of London Gallery Weekend from 31 May - 2 June 2024 for which the gallery will be open over the weekend. The Artist will be doing a tour of the show at the gallery on Saturday, 1 June at 4pm. One of the highlights of the exhibition is a large-scale watercolour study done for the Brixton...
- Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert and Frankie Rossi are delighted to announce 'Euan Uglow', a major loan exhibition marking the joint representation of The Estate of Euan Uglow. The twenty-five paintings on display bring together some of the artist’s most important nudes, still lifes, and landscapes. One of Britain's most significant figurative painters, Euan Uglow (1932-2000) is renowned for his meticulously constructed works. Rare and exceptional masterpieces from public and private collections present Uglow’s fastidious placement of bodies and limbs, his unwavering pursuit of clarity, and sensibility for planes of light and form. The accompanying catalogue is comprised of essays by the exhibition's...
- The Sunderland Collection will inaugurate its Art Programme at No.9 Cork Street with 'Fathi Hassan: Shifting Sands', an exhibition by Cairo-born, Edinburgh-based artist Fathi Hassan. Created in response to items from The Sunderland Collection, a private collection of rare antique world and celestial maps, the exhibition will engage with the experience of migration, dislocation, diasporic identity and shifting notions of heritage. Hassan uses maps as a lens, incorporating motifs and images that have recurred throughout his practice and drawing in new influences such as thinkers and creatives who have had a global influence on science or culture across borders.
- Patrick Heide Contemporary Art is delighted to present a new solo exhibition featuring the work of Sophie Bouvier Ausländer entitled 'Fishing the World'.
- The phrase ‘flash-looking’ suggests something slick and shiny, a high-gloss finish, a smooth way of operating. As a synchronising of parts, the phrase also suggests a quick glance, a glimpse, something seen out of the of corner of one’s eye: “What’s that”. Flash_Looking, featuring Toby Christian and Michela de Mattei, works through these connotations and more. Brought in dialogue, Toby and Michela’s artworks speak with and across each other with an anachronistic elegance, provoking questions about nature and being in our contemporaneous times. At first sight, Toby Christian’s hand-carved stone sculptures may initially intimate modernist language. In an art historical...
- Four Paintings marks the fourth exhibition of Yiannis Maniatakos, the first outside of Greece, and coincides with the creation of his Estate that is comprised of paintings, sculptures, photography and a boat. Born in 1935 in the Mani area of the Peloponnese, Maniatakos later established himself and spent the rest of his life with his family on the Cycladic island of Tinos, a place associated with the diversity of the building stone its inhabitants have been extracting for centuries: marble. A sculptor by birth, Maniatakos taught and directed the historical and still presently active school of marble artisans and sculptors...
- Like rap, trap, grime & drill language is shared and can be interpreted in many different ways. Marcus Jefferson's work responds to this inner city outside behaviour through the use of household domestic and everyday items/materials being manipulated so thier function is beyond its origin.
- Cardi Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of works by Swiss-French artist Gérard Schneider (1896 – 1986) in its London premises. A leading figure of post-war European painting, Schneider came to embody the Lyrical Abstraction movement that emerged in Paris during the 1950s. Featuring works created between 1956 and 1981, this exhibition traces the evolution of Schneider’s formal vocabulary through the post-war years. The paintings on show demonstrate the artist’s tireless conviction in the poetics of abstraction, as well as the gradual adoption of a looser, more essential visual language influenced by Japanese calligraphy.
- Galerie Max Hetzler presents a s olo exhibition of new paintings and works on paper by Giulia Andreani, in conjunction with her presentation at the 60th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia.
- Domo Baal is delighted and proud to present Graham Crowley's solo exhibition 'Light Fiction' in the gallery. Crowley is the winner of the 32nd John Moores Painting Prize, which was awarded for his painting 'Light Industry'. His paintings have been selected for the exhibition ten times previously with the first time being in 1976 and in 2008 he was also a jury member for the Prize. Later this year he will present a solo exhibition at TM Lighting in London from 5th December to 10th January 2025 and in Spring 2025 the Walker Gallery, Liverpool are holding a solo exhibition...
- Jeremy Olson’s latest exhibition with Unit goes ‘underground’. Through a series of works that depict subterranean environments, Grotto Domestic considers ideas of time and enclosed spaces through the eyes of the artist’s signature cast of otherworldly creatures. Are these grottos natural, or man-made? The answer is inherently ambiguous, as organic rock formations and pools of water are contrasted with sleek modernist furniture and sculptural artworks. Ideas of confinement are reflected in the gallery space itself. The low ceilings of the basement setting mirror the cave-like environments in which these creatures dwell. Softened through the inclusion of fabrics and wallpapers, Olson...
- The first solo exhibition of Sarah Bedford in London, presented in collaboration with Mrs. New York, encompasses a series of new paintings, which are about inspiring hope in a dying natural world through the symbolic representation of floral hybrids. The conceptual “seeds” of Bedford's paintings evolved from her decades-long work as a professional florist. These are exhibited within a large-scale site-specific floral wall painting filling the gallery walls. This is the fifth exhibition in VITRINE’s gallery collaboration programme in the Bermondsey, London, space.
- 'We infill plants with meaning for many reasons; they remind us of people we've loved or times in our lives. Guard seeks to remind us of the stubbornness of life, the human ability to evolve and adapt and ultimately our desire to survive.' - Jodie Carey Edel Assanti is pleased to present Guard, Jodie Carey's fifth solo exhibition at the gallery. A site-specific installation of 150 jesmonite sculptures mounted on steel supports stretches across the entirety of the two ground floor galleries, articulating a serpentine path through the space. Carey produced her latest installation employing a technique called earth-casting: wrapping...
- Maximillian William is proud to present the first posthumous exhibition in London of artist Gurminder Sikand. Following Sikand’s untimely death in 2021 aged 61, and her subsequent inclusion in significant surveys including Women in Revolt! at Tate Britain and RE/SISTERS at Barbican Art Gallery, this exhibition presents an in-depth view of Sikand’s early paintings from the late 1980s and early 1990s. Images of women drawn from Indian mythology recur throughout Sikand’s work. Her interest in the figure of the goddess – particularly the Hindu goddess Kali, who both destroys and creates the world anew, and is often pictured with a...
- halftime, of what? If Matt Bollinger’s previous exhibition for mother’s tankstation | Dublin, Off Peak [i] , suggested the necessity of research regarding the etiquette or socio-politics behind the timetabling of bus and train tickets, the current body of work on show at mother’s tankstation | London, encourages a similar itch-to-scratch-factor, regarding time intervals in sporting fixtures… Do we bring sandwiches or buy beer and snacks onsite? For starters, what is the correct semantic form, “halftime”, “half-time” and/or half time? Apparently all valid, equally linguistically acceptable, but with the only difference being (as far as I can see) “a kind-of...
- Maureen Paley is pleased to present the eighth solo exhibition by Hannah Starkey at the gallery, following her survey exhibition In Real Life at the Hepworth Wakefield, 2022. Her work is currently on display in two Hayward Gallery Touring exhibitions, Acts of Creation: On Art and Motherhood and After the End of History: British Working Class Photography 1989 – 2024, as well as the South London Gallery exhibition Acts of Resistance: Photography, Feminisms and the Art of Protest organised in collaboration with the V&A, London. Starkey’s large-scale photographs engage with how women are represented in contemporary culture. Her portraits capture...
- Hettie Inniss’ work responds to multisensory influences and bodily experiences, capturing and preserving moments inflected by scent, light, sound and memory on the canvas. Working from her involuntary memories, Inniss takes a Proustian approach to making, focusing on the unexpected moments where our senses are stimulated and the mind transports us to familiar or uncanny spaces. This will be her first solo show since joining GRIMM in December 2023.
- Displayed on the ground floor of the gallery, Histories in Flux will showcase a new series of oil paintings by the acclaimed painter Tim Kent. The 12 paintings due to be exhibited at JD Malat Gallery are reflections of – as the artist puts it – 'playing with art history'. Fragmented, yet visually consistent compositions of vast interiors, sculptures, historical figures and classical nudes blur, disconnect, and reshape in front of the viewer's eyes to critically engage with the systemic power structures that the canon of Western art history fortified but contemporary art must continuously dismantle.
- “We are always inside an object” –Timothy Morton, Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World (2013) Titanium and sinew, the galactic and the cellular, the terminal and the embryonic coalesce in Kolja Kärtner Sainz’s exhibition, 'Hypernode'. At once biological and mechanical, the works have a dispassionate, evolutionary drive, concerned with new anatomical pathways, alternate ecosystems, and novel, aesthetic registers. A decade ago, cultural theorist Timothy Morton coined the term 'hyperobject' to denote phenomena so large – both geographically and conceptually – they resist representation or understanding. Used to think about objects as varied as climate change to...
- Attention is a prelude for action. It’s scarce, both as currency and commodity. We consume at a pace as frenetic as that at which we forget, like that thought you started and then failed to write down. It comes out like a chant instead: 'The more I make, the more I have, the better I am, the more I am…' R.D. Laing’s words rattle on repeat, casting a mantra across each disrupted panel, the woman-made and machine-made colliding to the point where each forfeits their origin story. Overlaid, disjointed, and distracted. Dennison takes the 'blank canvas' and turns it into...
- ‘I look to the moon like a fellow traveller’ brings together twelve female artists whose practices conceive all life forms as part of a cyclical, interconnected entity. In their work, human forms assume the silhouettes of mountains, seashells spiral into celestial constellations. Weaving fragments of bodies into landscapes, the works in this show honour the kinship between humans, nature, and the cosmos.
- “It's your fiction that interests me. Your studies of the interplay of human motives and emotion.” ― Isaac Asimov, I, Robot Asimov’s seminal story is about the allure and potential ramifications of perfecting humanity through sentient technology—what we now call post-human or transhumanism. And like all of the finest works of science fiction, the book is at heart a philosophical tract. Questioning key assumptions about the nature of life itself, through a discourse with the consciousness of advanced robots, Asimov ultimately queries what it is to be human. For the past four decades, the acclaimed Japanese artist Hajime Sorayama has...
- Workplace is pleased to announce a solo exhibition with contemporary British painter Laura Lancaster. Opening in May 2024 to coincide with a major exhibition of her work at Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art, Sunderland, the presentation of 'In Dreams 'at Workplace will build upon and reflect Lancaster’s idiosyncratic exploration of collective memory, loss and longing. Embodying a poignant sense of transience and reflection, her paintings navigate an ambiguous territory between abstraction and figuration, shifting between the sentimental and melancholic, the uncanny and strange. Lancaster’s recent body of work depicts anonymous women set within pastoral landscapes, as part of her ongoing...
- RHODES is delighted to present 'In The Garden With You', by British artist Camilla Perkins. Inspired by the lush landscapes of British gardens, Perkins' new body of work captures the vibrant interplay of colour and form. Employing a blend of abstract and figurative elements, she focuses on the rich biodiversity found in green spaces, elevating the everyday of the British countryside and gardens into something spectacular. Perkins uses vibrant oil pastels and paint to craft a surreal colour palette that defines her pieces. Her technique incorporates bold, dynamic brushwork with thick, visible strokes, creating textured dreamscapes and still-lives. Her large-scale...
- This is an exhibition about ability. Over the years I have had the pleasure of working with artists, curators and colleagues who are truly exceptional. And also often truly dyslexic, dyspraxic, autistic, ADHD, face blind, the list goes on. For any problems it might cause them I believe that they couldn’t have achieved what they have without it. Some of you have been reading my texts for ten years now. Yes, this is the ten year anniversary of Copperfield so this time its personal. You might have noticed a few typos here and there that the spell checker does not...
- Mazzoleni, London is proud to present an exhibition featuring the works of Iran do Espírito Santo, marking his return to London after a decade. The exhibition showcases two distinct bodies of work: a collection of watercolours and a series of sculptures. Exploring the theme of domesticity, the exhibition delves into concepts of enclosure, disclosure, light, chance, and absence. Born in 1963 in Mococa, Brazil, Espírito Santo initially worked as an architect and photographer's assistant, specialising in black and white photography. His artistic journey evolved alongside his architectural background, heavily influenced by Brazilian modernist architecture and the urban landscape of São...
- A survey exhibition of significant works by the late surrealist and occultist, Ithell Colquhoun.
- For his first exhibition in London in over 20 years, New York-based artist Jack Pierson presents a new series of works that explore our experience of love, kinship, celebration, poetry, youth, and identity. Pierson diverted from the path of documentary photographers that he studied with in Boston, and was instead drawn to punk-influenced performativity, embracing non-linear, spontaneous compilations that prioritise the expression of individual freedoms over existing narratives. He has since, through a multi-disciplinary practice, challenged conventional hierarchies by commingling mediums equally. Featuring his signature word sculptures, photographs, a large-scale new array, and a series of folded photographic works, a...
- Bosse & Baum is pleased to present Jade de Montserrat's exhibition at the gallery, consisting of works on paper, which draws words and fractured images of her body to voice personal experiences of exploitation and violation at the hands of institutions, in particular those linked with cultural production.
- Jin Han Lee (b. 1982, Seoul, South Korea) lives and works in Seoul. Lee captures the sensory complexities and fleeting moments of quotidian existence by translating everyday details into layers of psychedelic colour and wild movement. The artist’s oil paintings exist in a space beyond language and instead evoke the sensory, drawing upon the juxtaposition between her South Korean heritage and experience of living in the UK. The works’ large scale and illusory nature bestow the viewer with a space for contemplation and introspection.
- Pace is pleased to announce Kiki Kogelnik: The Dance, the first solo presentation of the pioneering artist’s work in London, running from May 24 to August 3. This exhibition, whose title draws inspiration from the allegorical Danse Macabre, or the Dance with Death, will include works across various mediums that are emblematic of Kogelnik’s profound exploration of the future possibilities—and perils—of outer space, and her relationship to the altered and abstracted twentieth-century body. Incorporating work spanning three decades of production, The Dance showcases Kogelnik’s unique, futuristic visual language as a means in which to communicate the universal fragility of terrestrial...
- Klodin Erb (1963, Winterthur, Switzerland) is one of the most renowned current Swiss painters. In her expressive, fantastic pictorial worlds, she explores the boundaries of painting and simultaneously questions definitions of gender and identity. In an effort to combine topicality and timelessness in her paintings, the artist uses various techniques to ‘sample’ borrowings from art history with motifs from the contemporary world.
- In her second exhibition at Sadie Coles HQ, Georgia Gardner Gray presents a group of new paintings that look to a peculiar Spanish institution, the cobrador del frac (translated as the ‘frock-coated debt collector’), to examine universal notions of social performativity. Throughout her multidisciplinary practice that incorporates painting, sculpture and theatre, Gardner Gray constructs a boundless world of carnivalesque scenes that host a spectrum of characters lifted from capitalist archetypes, internet subcultures and beyond. Her distinctly contemporary mise-en-scènes reach back into art history and upend its codes, with figures rendered in kaleidoscopic colours exhibiting an anxiety and detachment from their...
- Pippy Houldsworth Gallery is pleased to present La petite mort , Jacqueline de Jong’s third solo exhibition with the gallery, bringing together new paintings made over the last two years with a group of rarely seen works executed sixty years ago. In her recent oeuvre de Jong comes full circle, exploring afresh the artistic lexicon of the earliest years of her career, when she first honed the vivid palette and expressive approach to mark-making for which she has become well known. In the intervening decades de Jong experimented with a range of styles, from pop to realism, in her analysis...
- Land, Sea, Air brings together a group of emerging artists whose work engages with ecology and the natural landscape. The selected artists are all interested in capturing the essence of our natural world, focusing on one (or any combination) of land, sea, and air. The title’s military connotations chime with the history of the Palmer Gallery building (which was once used as a factory in which parts for the Spitfire, Hurricanes and Lancaster Bombers were built during the Second World War), and alludes to the tensions between the natural and non-natural that is present in each of the artists’ work....
- 'Layers of Time: Giorgio Morandi and Alexis Ralaivao' invites viewers on a contemplative journey through the nuanced exploration of temporality in art. Giorgio Morandi's masterful canvases delicately capture the subtle shifts of light and shadow, serving as windows into suspended moments that prompt reflection on existence's transient nature. Widely regarded as an 'artists' artist,' Morandi's influence transcends trends in painting, resonating in debates from figuration to abstraction. Alexis Ralaivao's encounter with Morandi's work at the “Les Choses” exhibition in 2022 was transformative, deepened by a residency in Morandi's hometown of Bologna. The works exhibited at Nahmad Projects reflect the fruit...
- The Artist Room presents Leonardo Devito's (b. Florence, 1997) most expansive solo exhibition to date, including painting that explore manifest a 'tired city' and continue the artist's interest in combining autobiographical allegory with research surrounding imagery associated with religion and literature.
- Lisa Jahovic’s work is underpinned by an ongoing exploration of anthropomorphism - shifting between sculpture, film and photography to portray conceptual and often poetic ideas.
- 'Little Sound' is British-Bermudian artist Charlie Godet Thomas' fourth solo exhibition with the gallery, taking its title from the Italian word for sonnet, “sonetto” which translated literally means “little sound”. Traditionally, a sonnet is in praise of something (or someone), in this instance, those “somethings” are the easily overlooked moments, the little sounds, which are too often drowned out by the increasing dominance of “big noises”.
- Sim Smith is delighted to present 'Loud It Up', Tim Garwood’s third solo exhibition with the gallery. The exhibition continues Garwood’s exploration of the rich possibilities of painting through diverse aesthetic strategies and materials that have become synonymous with his practice including glass, glitter, jute and lace. The paintings in this exhibition mark a moving on, or rather a moving through, his painterly language with the inclusion of further materials; dried flowers, splintered wood and plant fronds, denoting a body of work that is unconsciously but undeniably, deeply rooted in the new surroundings of his Somerset studio in rural England,...
- In May 2024, Thomas Dane Gallery will present together two seminal groups of works from the 1970s by Lynda Benglis. The Knots, realised between 1972 and 1976, and made of cotton bunting, plaster, sparkle paint, sprayed metal or wire mesh, will cohabit at 11 Duke Street, St James’s with a group of her single-channel video works, made at just about the same time - showcasing Benglis’ trailblazing use of new technologies and materials, to shape her corporeal explorative practice. Since the 1960s, Lynda Benglis (b. 1941, Lake Charles, Louisiana) has been celebrated for her free, ecstatic forms that are simultaneously...
- John Swarbrooke Fine Art is delighted to announce an exhibition inspired by Sussex artist Edward Burra’s lifetime fascination with the macabre. The otherworldliness of Burra’s pictures provides the starting point for this exhibition, which features a century of artworks exploring the theme. Artists include John Minton, Graham Sutherland, Elizabeth Frink, Paula Rego, Grayson Perry, Gilbert & George, and Damien Hirst amongst others.
- Gazelli Art House gathers innovative collage work from venerated artists Helen Frankenthaler, Nancy Grossman, Grace Hartigan, Lilly Fenichel, Perle Fine, Betty Parsons, Sonja Sekula, Yvonne Thomas, and Michael (Corinne) West in an exceptional survey of Abstract Expressionism. Montage delivers a shrewd exploration of Abstract Expressionism via a curatorial focus on assemblage, collage, and non-canvas artworks, while also recognising Europe’s profound impact on the American Abstract Expressionist movement. Spotlighting Post-War artists long overlooked until recent decades, Gazelli Art House invites audiences to experience an amalgamation of diverse artistic voices that defined an era. Amidst a notable surge of interest in twentieth-century...
- Arusha Gallery is pleased to present 'Mythic from the Pacific / Pissing on the Inferno', a duo exhibition featuring new work by Naomi Workman and Plum Cloutman.
- Lévy Gorvy Dayan is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of new paintings by New York-based artist N. Dash, inaugurating the gallery’s new location in London’s Mayfair district. Opening on April 25, 2024, the artist’s debut exhibition with the gallery will feature multi-panel paintings that explore ecologies of resonance among disparate materials. N. Dash’s practice is grounded in and distinguished by bringing together organic substances, manufactured readymade objects, and images resulting from embodied processes. The tactile surfaces of these restrained, luminous works emphasize haptic experience, drawing attention to the subtle yet seismic effects of touch.
- Gagosian is pleased to present an exhibition of photographs by Nan Goldin at its gallery in London’s Burlington Arcade. Among Goldin’s earliest work, these photographs date from 1972 to 1974 and inspired the direction of her work for the subsequent fifty years. The black-and-white images commemorate Goldin’s closest friends, members of Boston’s transgender community. Goldin depicted them in a shared apartment and at one of her favorite places, The Other Side, the city’s most prominent drag club and one of the only queer spaces that existed in Boston at the time. Conveying the beauty, glamour, vulnerability, and joy of her...
- Presentation of new works by Jesper List Thomsen. 'It is this life, found in the interstices and crevices of a visually oppressive edifice, that List Thomsen’s works reveal. These are documentary pictures. They are structures, paintings, images and constructions, for sure. But they are pictures. A conundrum lies at the heart of the work that provides the impulse of these pictures. In an age so saturated by images that dominate the comprehension of your own life, how can other images that aim to reveal such an experience be captured? How to make pictures of places when places have been reduced...
- Sat in the intersection between photography and painting, Alina Frieske’s solo exhibition Nightly Newsfeed explores how accustomed we are to unsorted visual information held close to our bodies. Her tangible approach to photography speaks to the physicality of touch in relation to digital media and devices.
- 'Normal Life' continues artist Heesoo Kim’s considered study of human nature. The characters in his work are distinguished by impassive faces and a statuesque presence, but with an emotive resonance that speaks to their hidden inner worlds. Kim is motivated to create a neutral space onto which others can project their private thoughts or anxieties, as he is aware that observations of modern life equate to observations of rapid societal change and its accompanying uncertainties, and wishes to provide audiences with a space of understanding and serenity. The neutrality of his characters belies the turmoil of their inner worlds. Whereas...
- 'Her (Gibbons) still lives, mostly painted in Glasgow, are strong but melancholy interior harmonies where rich colours - some surprisingly sweet - glow among sombre ones.' Alasdair Gray, author of Poor Things (2003) Hales is delighted to announce, Of Silence and Slow Time, a solo exhibition by Carole Gibbons. Her debut show at the gallery exhibits still life paintings spanning a ten-year period from the mid-1970s to mid-1980s. The show at Hales London follows on from Gibbons' inclusion in Women in Revolt! Art and Activism in the UK 1970-1990, which originated at Tate Britain and tours to National Galleries Scotland...
- Doyle Wham is delighted to present Aisha Seriki's first global solo exhibition, Orí Inú ; a visual inquiry into spirituality, the history of photography, as well as its attachment to truth and time.
- For her inaugural exhibition with Lisson Gallery, Otobong Nkanga presents new sculptural objects, tapestries and a sound installation, as well as wall-hung and floor-based works – combining materials as diverse as clay, rope, glass, wood, textiles, oils and herbs. As an evocation of natural environments, Nkanga incorporates the images and properties of various stones and minerals into a new, monumental carpet, while towers of raku-fired ceramics create intermittent forests of scorched tree trunks. For every suggestion of destruction – a parched or ruined landscape – there is also the possibility of hope and renewal in the same space – a...
- On Thursday, 30 May, Luxembourg + Co., London, will open Out of Fashion at its 2 Savile Row gallery. The exhibition explores turning points in the history of fashion taking as its starting point one of Domenico Gnoli’s most important paintings.
- Owl Mountain alludes to the myth of a Nazi train of looted treasure that went missing during WWII and is believed buried in passages beneath Owl Mountains, Central Sudetes, Southwestern Poland. The myth has endured, without evidence, since the war and through both communist and post communist periods. Its persistent popularity speaks of the allure of the unreachable, our want to imagine treasures greater than those we can see, and our desire for romance and gold. Magda Blasinska’s work seeks to transmit the experience of wonder. Most recently oscillating between painting and installation, which utilises wheat reed forms constructed with...
- 'Painting & Plinths' focuses on Neil Gall’s imaginative explorations of two and three-dimensional objects - hybrid objects that live between sculpture and painting, made and found, assembled and cast.
- Vardaxoglou Gallery will present a group exhibition curated by artist Tanoa Sasraku, bringing together works providing a critical context to the artist’s series of Terratypes. The individual works included have been selected for their visual, material, or conceptual connection with Sasraku’s Terratypes, a body of work started in 2020 which draws on the artist’s personal and historical connection to the British landscape. The exhibition displays the various influences on Sasraku’s Terratypes, from a Pre-Independence Asafo Flag, through to a 1947 Bill Brandt photograph and a 1972 Richard Smith canvas, and also includes peers of the artist working today. Terratypes are...
- Living in Ruwa, a town 30 minutes’ drive from Harare, Gareth Nyandoro has been observing and documenting the everyday lives, and informal entrepreneurship of its residents in small to large-scale mixed-media drawings and installations, in his inimitable 'kuchecka- cheka' style influenced by etching techniques, paper-cutting, assemblage, and props. The exhibition presents Nyandoro's personal engagement with the concept of 'pfumvudza' meaning early shoots, to bloom or thrive, and the name of the 2020 Zimbabwean government-sanctioned programme funded by the UN, advocating citizen self-sufficiency, to help mobilise, train and support families and small crop growers to implement conservation agriculture to restore, and...
- Michael Werner Gallery, London is pleased to present Phantom , an exhibition of recent paintings and sculptures by Raphaela Simon (b. 1986, Villingen, Germany). Throughout her career, Simon has sought to capture the ineffable on canvas. Even when painting a seemingly neutral subject, such as an abstract shape or an inanimate object, Simon is looking for the tension or “the hidden power beneath the surface.” In her recent works, Simon has shifted to painting figures and heads that are subjected to a variety of situations and scenarios. The heads, with their fixed expressions and hollow appearance, are also masks. As...
- Project Native Informant presents a three person exhibition with Kathryn Kerr, Antonia Kuo and Leslie Martinez on the nature of transformation and belief. Titled Phosphor, all three artists share a conceptual and formal process of alchemy, transforming what was once mire and murky into light and brightness. In phosphorescence, a solid material is exposed to radiation such as ultraviolet light or an electron beam, and what was once dark, hidden, forbidden, is illuminated, uncovered, accessible. Kerr, Kuo and Martinez are collectors of materials — be it iconography drawn from the internet, from personal memories or photographs, or objects imbued with...
- a. SQUIRE is thrilled to present PLUTO, the first London exhibition by Düsseldorf-based Trinidadian painter Ryan Huggins. The show takes the form of a frieze comprising 16 vignettes which survey the carnal architectures and queer encounters of Pluto, a gay bathhouse in Essen, Germany. As Stanton Taylor writes of the sauna, 'for all its vastness, there isn’t a single instance of external light. The space itself seems to obliterate the passage of time–a palace of eternal night.'
- Castor is delighted to announce psychic surface, London-based artist Mark Jackson’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. Jackson’s heavily impastoed oil paintings lure the viewer closer with their shimmering surfaces and soft, impressionistic forms. Frequently depicting figures and faces at roughly human scale, the works at once address us directly, and yet remain visually elusive and hard to grasp, resulting in an otherworldly gestalt. Whilst the common usage of ‘psychic’ refers to a person who connects with purported alternate realities, Jackson suggests that, “maybe other realities do exist, just not spooky ones. What we don't know, what we cannot perhaps...
- Modern Art is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Richard Aldrich across Helmet Row and Bury Street. This is Aldrich’s third solo exhibition with the gallery. Working within an expanded definition of painting, Richard Aldrich’s works alternate between expressing an abundance of visual information, and material reticence; a kind of withholding of their contents. Occupied with the minutiae of an idiosyncratic personal existence - a self-contained system of meaning – his works are situated in private dialogue with himself and with painting that occasionally unveils itself to the external viewer. At the same time, however, they are...
- Modern Art is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Richard Aldrich across Helmet Row and Bury Street. This is Aldrich’s third solo exhibition with the gallery. Working within an expanded definition of painting, Richard Aldrich’s works alternate between expressing an abundance of visual information, and material reticence; a kind of withholding of their contents. Occupied with the minutiae of an idiosyncratic personal existence - a self-contained system of meaning – his works are situated in private dialogue with himself and with painting that occasionally unveils itself to the external viewer. At the same time, however, they are...
- Kate MacGarry is delighted to announce Renee So’s fourth solo exhibition at the gallery. 'Renee So is a playful observer of objects and the stories that accrue to them over time... So has evolved an art practice that engages conceptually and materially with traditional (and ancient) craft forms that more often sit outside the short, official histories of modern and contemporary art... Geographically dispersed figurines with similar bodily representations, and clay vessels with anthropomorphic features are some of the formal tendencies that So picks up on and iterates in her works. Recurring motifs include portrait busts; anthropomorphised bottles and jugs,...
- 'Repetitive' is the first solo exhibition by German, London-based artist Ana Viktoria Dzinic at NICOLETTI, London. Working predominantly with photography and installation, Dzinic’s practice investigates contemporary methods of image production, analysing the relationship between processes of subjectivity formation and current modes of fabrication, circulation and consumption of technical images. In 'Repetitive', the artist presents a series of photographs featuring objects and motifs inspired by the concept of pace layering, which provides an analysis of civilisation as a superimposition of categories evolving at a different speed, from nature, culture and infrastructure up to the so-fast-it-becomes-impossible-to-track: fashion and technology. Taken with her...
- Delia Hamer's latest exhibition, 'Rinse My Soul', in RHODES Project Room, delves into the profound connections between water and spiritual renewal, continuing the thematic exploration of her earlier works. With this new body of work, Hamer sharpens her focus on the symbolic act of cleansing and regeneration through rituals akin to Christian baptism or the ancient bathings at the Eleusinian mysteries, where water acts as a medium for transformation - where the old is relinquished for the new. Born in Germany and raised under the vivid sun of southern Spain, Hamer's palette is rich with the hues of the Mediterranean—azure...
- TBetween 1984 and 1991 Robert Rauschenberg undertook a monumental cultural exchange programme to foster mutual understanding between different cultures through artistic expression. The Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI), pronounced ‘Rocky’ after the artist’s pet turtle, foregrounds his conviction in art as a force for positive social change, along with the role of travel as a key catalyst for his characteristically experimental approach to materials and techniques. Spanning the entirety of the seven years of ROCI’s intense creative production, the exhibition at Thaddaeus Ropac London encompasses canvases, sculptures, cardboard works, neon light, photogravures and textiles, as well as an example of...
- Sam Bakewell's third solo exhibition at Corvi-Mora.
- A group exhibition including Carole Gibbons, Roy Oxlade and Max Wade. For London Gallery Weekend, Sid Motion Gallery presents an exhibition of works by Carole Gibbons, Roy Oxlade and Max Wade. The exhibition brings together three artists, spanning different generations whose work sits on the edge of abstraction and figuration.
- For his exhibition at Sadie Coles HQ, 'SECONDARY: light lens parallax', Barney employs a series of formal tactics that examine the intersection between repetitive physical movement and the iterative artistic gesture. Exploring athletic equipment and infrastructural objects as evocations for the figure, the artist’s new sculptures examine both failure and resilience within the body. While the gallery proposes itself as an arena for action, Barney exploits the varying natural qualities of his materials as metaphor for recovery and collapse. The ceramic pipe of Sanguine Axis is fused with plastic and buttressed by a stack of cast resin sandbags. It is...
- Yoan Capote's work is strongly linked to the fact that he was born on Cuba, an Island whose geography and history have subjected its population to live extremely visceral and traumatic experiences and this exhibition brings together a number of works from different series that reflect on this trauma.
- A new body of work by Eddie Ruscha (b. 1968) for his second solo exhibition at the gallery. Eddie Ruscha’s new body of work, entitled Seeing Frequencies, develops the LA-based artist’s long-standing interest in the visual modalities of sound and music. The exhibition will be accompanied by an immersive LP of the same name, which is an exciting departure in his musical practice and charts an atmospheric and experimental course in multi-percussive sounds. The paintings themselves are inspired by the philosopher and scientist Margaret Mead’s ideas of ‘the listening post’, a source that collected and synthesized information from across all...
- HackelBury Fine Art, London is pleased to present Sharon Walter’s first London solo exhibition. ‘Seeing Ourselves’ features work from the ongoing series, in which Walters creates intricate hand-assembled collages honouring Black Women - their history, culture and identity.
- SHIMABUKU LAND ART Erect 2017 Reborn Art Festival Ayukawa, Ishinomaki, Miyagi Placing things upright. Placing the things lying down upright. Placing the trees and stones that lie on the beach upright. With the collaboration of many people, we will place many things in an upright position. We will also try to put our energy together to place huge driftwood in an upright position. Our actions should make something that lies in our hearts stand up in an upright position as well. The White Road 2019 Reborn Art Festival Ayukawa, Ishinomaki, Miyagi The white road passes through the trees and extends...
- New Art Projects is delighted to present the first solo exhibition by Taiwanese artist Hsi-Nong Huang. Following the completion of her MA in Sculpture at The Royal College of Art, Huang lives and works in London. At first glance, Huang’s recent practice explores the dialogue between sculpture, performance, sound and drawing with a focus on historic minimalist interventions and installations, however on further inspection a complex conversation between materials is revealed that both explore and represent an emotional relationship between ‘two halves’. In her sculptures, she creates a meeting point between materials that can hold hidden personal histories, preserve memories,...
- SIN CENTRE is for Pleasure, a place and programme made by artists, writers, designers and friends working together. It incorporates various specified entertainments (bar, library, etc.) as well as unprogrammed spaces for amusement. SIN CENTRE is to service the immediate desires of the public, asserting pleasure and leisure above all else: satisfying the unruly mind, feeling comfortable, forging connection, surprise and delight. George Rouy, Jesse Pollock, Mellony Harvey, Nikolaj Schultz, Stevie Dix, Joe Sweeney, Kingsley Ifill, Danny Fox, Tali Lennox, Lisa Ivory, Marie Jacotey, Paloma Proudfoot, Ebun Sodipo, Scott Young, Simon Whybray, Miranda Keyes, Jermaine Gallacher, Harley Weir, Inez Valentine,...
- Gagosian is pleased to announce Nan Goldin’s 'Sisters, Saints, Sibyls' , the second presentation of Gagosian Open, a series of off-site projects that allows audiences to experience remarkable artworks in unusual contexts. The exhibition is on view at the former Welsh chapel at 83 Charing Cross Road, London, from 30 May to 23 June 2024. Goldin begins her film 'Sisters, Saints, Sibyls' (2004–22) with the myth of Saint Barbara, presenting the story of the early Christian martyr as a three-channel projection that echoes the triptych format of classical religious painting. Images of Saint Barbara accompany a voiceover that describes her...
- In a series of vividly coloured, otherworldly spaces we encounter a woman and her cat, the boundaries between their bodies blurred to evoke states of transformation and interconnectedness. 'Slow Blink', Amy Beager’s latest solo exhibition at Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, was made in a period of grief, following the loss of her cat Ashitaka. Drawing on personal memories and fluctuating emotions, these tender paintings trace their relationship and Beager’s experience of mourning while also exploring our wider connection to nature and the spiritual realm. While Beager’s compositions often refer to motifs from art history or specific mythological narratives, the colours, lines...
- Berntson Bhattacharjee is proud to present Smörgåsbord: a group exhibition celebrating Nordic contemporary art. In collaboration with Angeliki Kim Perfetti, a Swedish art historian, writer and curator, this exhibition offers a delectable spread of artistic talent, exploring the nuanced character of the region’s art scene. Featuring six prominent artists from Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland and Iceland to present their unique practices – Johan Deckmann, Baldur Helgason, Jenni Hiltunen, Sally Kindberg, Shoplifter, and Constance Tenvik – the exhibition defies the notion of moderation in Nordic art, instead embracing a bold and vibrant approach. Through their distinctive practices, the exhibiting artists bring...
- Gallery rosenfeld is delighted to host ‘Sun Wreck’, the second solo exhibition of British artist Araminta Blue. These large-scale, immersive oil paintings take figuration to the extreme so that they border on abstraction. Vivid light and rich colours are dispersed across the canvas through turbulent, fizzing water and sweeping figures. ‘For me these paintings are about hope, energy and colour; bursting out of shells, washed up in currents, plus air, light and warmth on skin’. The artist explains her thoughts about this latest body of works. Certainly, in respect to her previous exhibition, the strength and brightness of colour has...
- ‘Survival Bias ’ will bring together previous iterations of Brianna’s research into their most ambitious project yet, taking form as a site-specific cold room housing a new series of copper-plated objects. The freezing temperature preserves the lifespan of the sculptures inside, and will create a stark contrast to the warm June weather outside – imposing a dramatic micro climate within the exhibition space. The exhibition will be fully interactive, with visitors able to step inside the cold room.
- Marking a profound exploration of Tai Shan Schierenberg's German and Chinese Malaysian heritage, Mixed Emotions offers a series of self-portraits and landscapes that navigate the intricacies of identity and belonging.
- Timothy Taylor is pleased to present Tender Mountain, an exhibition of new paintings by Hayal Pozanti. Marking the artist's first solo exhibition in the UK and her second with the gallery, this presentation will feature seven large and medium-scale paintings, as well as three studies, depicting expressive landscapes and exuberant biomorphic forms. These lush, surreal canvases document the artist's dedicated exploration of her experiences in nature.
- Saatchi Yates presents a solo exhibition by Ethiopian artist Tesfaye Urgessa, coinciding with the artist’s representation at Ethiopia’s inaugural participation in La Biennale di Venezia 2024. Following his exhibition Prejudice and Belonging, the London presentation is an academic survey of his overall practice, including preliminary charcoal on paper sketches and large-scale oil paintings. The selection of work demonstrates the compositional development of Urgessa’s unique works and how the artist’s personal experience of prejudice has profoundly shaped his artistic practice. Having moved back to his hometown Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Urgessa’s work delves deeper into socio-political issues of race, migration, war and...
- South Parade is pleased to present 'The Cart Before the Horse', James Fuller’s second solo exhibition at the gallery, continuing its long-standing commitment to his sculptural practice. Through fragile surfaces of copper, beeswax and textiles, Fuller sketches out curious technological visions, by mining the imagery and language of newly published patents. Extracted moments of incidental poetry permeate the works and provide alternative visibility on which to pin collective consciousness.
- In 'The Consolation of Imaginary Things', the first solo exhibition of Irini Bachlitzanaki (b.1984, Athens) with IONE & MANN, the artist presents a body of work which expands on her ongoing exploration of the cultural significance of objects and material imagining; building on a series of wall-based sculptures referencing design and domestic interiors, she also examines their personal significance and their ability to double as coping mechanisms through experiments with relief sculpture and the language of diagrams and schematic representation.
- Guts Gallery is pleased to present The Future of Loneliness, a group exhibition curated by Maria Dolfini. Drawing from Olivia Laing’s homonymous essay, the show explores interpretations of loneliness and intimacy in present times, probing the impact of current technological and social structures on our ability to connect and find authenticity in human contact. The exhibition does not endeavour to portray solitude as a homogenous experience, but as a fluid, meandering and non-chronological journey, a collection of tales and emotions reflecting on the fabric of aloneness today. What does it mean for artists to make art, consciously and unconsciously, in...
- “The entire world has been turned into a well-fitted mask for the human face,” reflects theorist Carl Olsson in his essay “Peak Face” (2023). “The world is a Facehugger.” From the Cambrian Explosion to deepfakes, Olson analyses the history and seeming end of the face as the ultimate interface, given the ease with which this platform can be co-opted, manipulated and artificed through digital technologies. From this POV, it’s as if the ultimate paradigm of our individuality—our face—has been stripped of any currency at all. But perhaps there’s something else of value in the anonymous swarm intelligence of a post-facial...
- Larkin Durey is delighted to present an exhibition of new work by Andrew Maughan. In this, his second presentation with the gallery, Maughan continues to explore political and sociological schisms via his hooded protagonist. Curator and gallerist, Matt Carey-Williams has crafted an illuminating introductory essay titled 'A Road to Nowhere', an excerpt of which follows here: 'Maughan’s slice through the signifying tropes and coda of America (as landscape, political machine, and idea) is only so that he can reveal just how hairy the journey is and how futile the destination (and our desire for it) ultimately proves to be. His...
- David Zwirner London will present an exhibition of new paintings by Belgian artist Michaël Borremans (b. 1963). In this new body of work, Borremans continues to explore surface and artifice in his careful consideration of mise-en-scène, combining technical mastery with subject matter that defies straightforward interpretation. This exhibition follows the opening of Borremans’s solo presentation in April 2024 at Prada Rong Zhai, Shanghai, and will be the artist’s eighth solo exhibition with the gallery and his first at David Zwirner London since 2015.
- The Sand In The Pearl centres on a new body of work by Nottingham-based artist Sophie Goodchild informed by the healing and nurturing properties of wool. The exhibition is an extension of Sophie’s research into ‘Wool as a Cloak for Survival: The Alchemy of Form and Fabric’ and explores from an interpretive symbolic perspective how the spiral, a motif found in landscape, architecture, and throughout the natural world, emulates cyclical movements and helical structures and its relation to chaos and (dis)order within the mundane. A series of felted tapestries guide the viewer through the gallery into imagined landscapes drawing from...
- The Gallery of Everything presents The Secret Lives of Plants - a compendium of imagined flora and fauna, featuring the unnatural botany of Anna Zemánková (1908 - 1986), the visionary ceramics of Eugene von Bruenchenhein (1910 - 1983) and others.
- It is a fragile world we live in, made of many intricate processes like an ongoing spider web. No word stands alone to explain this fragility and intricacy. And the responsibility of being human comes from telling the story behind each word, so that there is no mistake in what is meant. For more than half a century, Nil Yalter’s work has been dedicated to uncovering the strength, resilience and hope that makes this fragile, intricate core, through stories of people that keep the world running with a deep critique of injustice. She has woven these stories with elements she...
- Titled after the 1929 Louis Armstrong song 'When You’re Smiling (The Whole World Smiles With You),' this exhibition interrogates various modes of figuration by contemporary Black artists. This exhibition includes works by artists who challenge the Western canon by overtly reconfiguring renowned paintings to include Black protagonists or, more covertly, portraying figures in poses reminiscent of pre-twentieth-century European portraiture. Other works in the exhibition demonstrate a tendency among Black artists to distort, simplify, or caricature the image of a Black person – either to draw attention to negative stereotypes or to imagine Black bodies extending beyond imposed limitations. This exhibition...
- An ambitious solo presentation by emerging interdisciplinary artist Fran Hayes, featuring digital paintings and video works that delve into speculative landscapes, inspired by damaged ecologies, science-fiction, and the uncanny; all viewed through a profoundly human lens. Stumbling into technotime you are confronted by amorphous energies, they are whispering sweet nothings - forgotten melodies, dark truths, hidden narratives - digital paintings spill from screens, illuminating elastic futures.
- Cristea Roberts Gallery is delighted to announce a new solo exhibition by Vicken Parsons, her first in the UK for four years. Vicken Parsons: Time (25 April – 2 June 2024) will feature twenty-five new paintings made over the last three years. These works mark a new development in the artist’s practice which continues to investigate the possibility of the two-dimensional plane as a place of depth, breadth and potential. 'Vicken Parsons: TIME' coincides with the publication of the artist’s first retrospective monograph, a 296-page publication featuring works from throughout her career including drawings, paintings and sculpture. Texts by fellow...
- The metaphor of excavation plots the line of enlightenment. Ours has been a constant search for the grammar of life: methods by which we can extract sense from non-sense, decipher meaning from chaos, find vocabulary for the wisps we once resorted to calling ‘ghosts’. In its making visible the invisible, the act of excavation seeks to rescue the intelligible from the darkness of ignorance by reconstituting, piecemeal, fossilised memory. So begins the philosophical conundrum in which Hong Kong born artist Yi To prefigures the materiality of fragmented body, and its reappearance in the virtual as sign. To’s intervisuality is thus...
- Vigo is proud to announce Traveller's Journal, our second solo show with Henrik Godsk, the first at Mason’s Yard following on from his exhibition last year at Wellington Arch in association with English Heritage. Godsk is of seventh-generation Traveller heritage, his practice reflecting his pride in his upbringing and cultural identity growing up in the world of the itinerant Fun Fair. His paintings fuse folkloric and high art, with his portrait subjects essentially acting as vessels for his exploration of colour and form. The formal components of his practice are inseparable from time spent as a child painting the panels...
- True Form' is Adelaide Cioni’s debut exhibition at The Approach, showing new works across both gallery spaces. Inspired by a quote from the Ancient Egyptian Panehsy, Royal Treasurer to Pharaoh Ramesses II, the show talks about our relationship with the artworks that we make or surround ourselves with, connecting it to questions of translation. In the main gallery, Cioni has produced several large unstretched cotton fabric paintings of female forms. These are enlargements of drawings that she made of statuettes from museums, including the British Museum in London and the Egyptian Museum in Turin. Though distinctly female, the forms are...
- Emalin is pleased to present TRUTH AND CHAOS, Judith Bernstein’s first exhibition in London in over a decade. The exhibition comprises works spanning thirty years of Bernstein’s practice. Direct and confrontational, they are inspired by outrage and violence, the American military industrial complex and the private scribbles of the Yale University men’s bathroom stalls. The exhibition presents historical works from her 1990s ‘word drawings’ series alongside the maximalist phallic screw drawings that Bernstein has been making since 1969 and that initiated her complicated relationship with censorship and popular recognition amidst 1970s second-wave feminism. Judith Bernstein is concerned with the psyche...
- Brooke Benington are pleased to present Two Volcanoes , an exhibition of new sculptures by Andrew Sabin. This ambitious body of work further explores his unique process of sculpting the void and will be Sabin’s first solo show at the gallery.
- David Micheaud’s practice is concerned with the act of looking. Seemingly mundane objects and landscapes are carefully observed over time. Overlooked details become central in paintings that capture the atmospheric tones of light and delicate shifts in colour of the environments that frame them. They appear to be born of a resistance to the typical pace of looking; a desire to slow down and delve deeper. Drawing on his experiences with epilepsy, Micheaud found new ways to think about beauty, peace and a confidence in his own experiences of quietude. Taking inspiration for the correct translation for Freud's 'unheimlich' which...
- The Mayor Gallery announces the first solo exhibition in Europe of visionary Brazilian artist, Waldemar Cordeiro (b. 1925 Rome, Italy – d. 1973 São Paulo, Brazil). Sixteen works, many of which have never been shown outside Brazil, form the basis of this exhibition in which different phases of Cordeiro’s intensive production from the late 1940s to his early death in 1974 are brought into new curatorial focus. Regarded as the greatest of Brazil’s exponents of concrete art in the 1950s, Cordeiro was an original and visionary practitioner and theorist, who brought both these domains together in an astonishingly productive oeuvre....
- On view is a revival of Isa Genzken’s expansive installation ‘Wasserspeier and Angels’ (2004), marking 20 years since it was displayed in Genzken’s first major solo exhibition in London. Originally responding to Hauser & Wirth’s former historic space in Piccadilly in 2004, the re-presentation of Genzken’s complex assemblage in the city brings her work into a contemporary context, confronting socio-political themes that are still relevant today. This moment follows on from the acclaimed exhibition ‘Isa Genzken: 75/75’ at Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin in 2023, celebrating the artist’s 75th birthday with a display of 75 sculptures from her oeuvre from the...
- Project Native Informant presents a three person exhibition with Kathryn Kerr, Antonia Kuo and Leslie Martinez on the nature of transformation and belief. Titled Phosphor, all three artists share a conceptual and formal process of alchemy, transforming what was once mire and murky into light and brightness. In phosphorescence, a solid material is exposed to radiation such as ultraviolet light or an electron beam, and what was once dark, hidden, forbidden, is illuminated, uncovered, accessible. Kerr, Kuo and Martinez are collectors of materials — be it iconography drawn from the internet, from personal memories or photographs, or objects imbued with...
- Cara Benedetto’s WGW examines the construction of white victimhood in media. A series of psychotically fangirled prints combine images of popular US actors playing UK royals – Kristen Stewart as Princess Diana and Margot Robbie as Queen Elizabeth – with text describing the ontology of White Girl Wasted. The voices shift from someone who finds vindication, liberation, and joy in their debasement to apathetic or awkwardly analytic. Yr hair is on fire. White suburban women voted Trump into office in 2016. With a similar premise looming, Benedetto asks with urgency, why are white women so eager to self-destruct? Do you...
- ‘I am interested in the reactionary roots, politically speaking, of the retreat into craft that is happening everywhere and that signals a form of anti-modernity.’ Hollybush Gardens is pleased to present What Is So Terrible About Craft?, an exhibition of new and recent works by Andrea Büttner which continue her research into recurring instances in modernity where craft and design appear as a form of solace, or retreat. The exhibition includes two videos, a selection of large- format woodcuts, a photograph and a group of hand-blown glass vases displayed on a wooden table, which together critique the supposed human warmth...
- The annual large group show What Now? shares PM/AM’s vision of the vanguard of contemporary art from emerging artists.
- Skarstedt is delighted to announce Dangerous Waters, Yuan Fang’s first solo exhibition with the gallery and the artist’s debut in London. The exhibition showcases twelve new paintings marked by their monumental scale, cascading cyclical forms and deep, redolent colour palette. The paintings on display illustrate Fang’s cerebral exploration of water as both a spatial barrier and a representation of women, providing an intimate insight into the artist’s world. Choosing the exhibition title for its personal resonance, Fang explains that it is about both the ‘external and internal’, alluding to the danger presented to us and that we present to society....
- Drawing, painting, sculpture, collage, moving image and photography collide and retreat from one another, establishing an orbit of recuring motifs. It could be argued, however, that the central medium of Aran’s practice is the exhibition itself, and its affective field as analogous to the page. The decisions Aran makes are akin to the rhythm, grammar, prosody and intonation of poetry. Physical points in space, like the structural arrangement of words on a page. Poetry is language’s excess. It is language that cannot be only reduced to information, it has the capacity to destabilise deeply entrenched ideas and forms, around which...
- Addis Fine Art is pleased to present Amel Bashier’s solo exhibition ورد الجوري 'Ward el Juri', named for her daughter and translating to 'damask rose'. The exhibition features new paintings and recent works on paper. Amel’s works are reflections on the nature and possibilities of freedom. She paints towards the liberation of women, symbolically connecting this emancipation with the growth and persistence of the natural world. The women in her paintings, semi-mythical images of bravery and power, stare boldly back at their viewer. The flowers, leaves, and twisting stems represent the vital force within us, and the promise of flourishing...
- Lucía Pizzani’s practice, informed by her studies in conservation biology and involvement in Venezuela’s environmental movement, is concerned with the intertwining narratives of natural and human histories. In this immersive exhibition, Pizzani presents newly commissioned and site-specific works which hold, in their material makeup, interspecies stories of migration: of plants and their products, cultural practices, and the artist’s own migration from Venezuela to London. Pizzani’s ceramic Flora Totems are sites of cultural convergence, made from English clay and imprinted with corn and eucalyptus, as Pizzani invokes the histories of flora both native and imported to South America. These anthropomorphic sculptures...