Rachel Ann Grigor @ Brook Gallery
Brook GalleryThis work, Composition, by Rachel Ann Grigor deals with the harmony of art, including musical extracts from Isaac Short.
This work, Composition, by Rachel Ann Grigor deals with the harmony of art, including musical extracts from Isaac Short.
Three striking sculptures by Lynn Chadwick (1914-2003) - These three “Beasts” (Crouching Beast II, Lion I and Beast Alerted I) are monumental animals captured in various states of action, made of welded stainless-steel sheets.
Unconscious Landscape, is a collection of works from Ursula Hauser Collection that focusses entirely on female artists. The exhibition covers four decades of works that brings together a remarkable overview […]
Kate Nicholson's exhibition covers the breadth of her creativity. It includes examples of early landscapes (Cumberland, Isle of Skye and St Ives), the still life's she made in St Ives […]
Pakistani visual artist Sara Shakeel presents a new sculptural work ‘The Great Supper’. Traces of an intimate family meal are concealed at the centre of the gallery, inviting the viewer […]
Following the success of our 2018 tour of Photo London, we are again offering an outing to London's premiere photo event. Join us this year as we tour with Tristan […]
Die Wässer und Libellenlust, is a solo exhibition of works by Heidi Bucher. The show focusses on water and the symbol of the dragonfly, two major aspects of her practice […]
This major centre-wide ‘festival-style’ exhibition explores creative and scientific developments in AI, demonstrating its potential to revolutionise our lives. Bringing together artists, scientists and researchers, this interactive exhibition offers an […]
‘A Lot or Knot’ is an exhibition of new sculptures and works on paper by Martina von Meyenburg. The histories of found objects and materials form the basis of von […]
On display is a special Billboard Commission, which is a work by Nora Berman, entitled Piped Woman.
This exhibition presents the largest solo display of Pearl Alcock’s drawings and paintings to date – all from the Whitworth Collection. Following the Brixton riots in the early 1980s, trade […]
In Sara Lee’s ‘Beckoning Lines’ she produces intense pastel drawings of landscapes that have no bearing on distance. Each is a desert of infinity where one is pulled into the nuance […]
‘My Kind of Protest’, is an exhibition of works by Emma Amos, Vivian Browne and Chemu Ng’ok. Working across different time periods, each of these artists creates psychologically charged portraits […]
Lucy Jones’s paintings conduct a journey through both interior landscapes and the external world beyond. Landscapes and Inscapes, an exhibition of new landscape and portrait paintings includes a portrait of artist Grayson […]
An exhibition of works by Luchita Hurtado. I Die I will be Reborn traces the trajectory of Hurtado’s expansive, 80-year career and reveals the scale, experimentation and playfulness of her impressive oeuvre. […]
An exhibition in Paris by Annette Messager with new works and a set of new drawings, including her first video installation, Lost in Limbos (2019). The exhibition opens with a series of […]
After moving to Paris from Beirut in 1970, Huguette Caland achieved artistic recognition with her exuberant and erotically charged paintings that challenged traditional conventions of beauty and desire. The female physique is a recurrent motif in her work, often painted like landscapes with voids and mountain-like forms. Shifting between figuration and abstraction, large, colourful canvasses and detailed drawings […]
Posy Simmonds’ sharp satire and progressive female characters have defined a career spanning 50 years. This retrospective will feature her early-career pastiches, iconic cartoon strips for The Guardian and children’s books such as Fred, which became an Oscar-nominated film. It will also include the first ever British graphic novel, True Love, unseen pages from Tamara Drewe and drawings […]
A solo exhibition and premiere of Zoe Williams’s new moving image work, Sunday Fantasy. The work uses the language of fantasy to play with and subvert dominant power structures, dissecting and interrogating current representations of the erotic and viewing them through an importantly female and queered lens.
This exhibition celebrates the work and life of Lee Krasner (1908–1984), a pioneer of Abstract Expressionism. The first major presentation of her work in Europe for more than 50 years, Living Colour tells the story of a formidable artist, whose importance has too often been eclipsed by her marriage to Jackson Pollock. Discover Krasner’s spirit […]