Vivienne Williams RCA @ Thackeray Gallery
Thackeray GalleryVivienne Williams paints pots, jugs and bowls, flowers and fruit, that are represented in her exhibition.
Vivienne Williams paints pots, jugs and bowls, flowers and fruit, that are represented in her exhibition.
Zarah Hussain's exhibition Super Symmetry features new paintings from Zarah's 'Breath' series, examples of her wall sculptures and a new limited-edition print, published specially for the exhibition. Spiritual traditions around the world have long used the breath as a tool for transformation and awakening. In this body of work Zarah Hussain explores the universal sanctity and necessity […]
Alexandra Zarins’ work is rooted in an almost dreamlike realm. Entering her world, we are invited into stories inspired by her own life, observations, and imagination. Caught in the act of being ourselves, brings together five new works and a selection of drawings to mark the artist’s first solo show. In Zarins’ pictorial vocabulary, drawings play a […]
The razor-sharp, witty and unmistakable work of Barbara Kruger explores the power of image and word and touches on the dynamics of control, class, corruption and consumerism.
In a painting practice that stretches over five decades, Marilyn Lerner has developed a unique visual vocabulary of colour and form, producing compositions that reverberate in their kaleidoscopic nuance.
Amber, a new exhibition by Hazel Brill, features a series of sculptures and video. Brill's installation references a gothic laboratory that conjures a shiny utopian future, which has turned messy and grotesque. Inspired by intricate set designs and depictions of laboratories from horror films, the artist is interested in gothic horror fiction as a device […]
‘Sorry I’m Not Sorry’ not only reflects Lauren Joy Kennett's personal story, but also resonates with the wider late-discovered autistic community and neurotypical people, inviting empathy and a deeper understanding. Through autobiographical and archive photography, LJK uses cutting and collaging techniques to explore self-discovery, confrontation of life’s traumas, and experiences that have shaped her existence.
Celebrate the work of artist and specialist wood engraver Anne Desmet, at this new exhibition inspired by "climate crisis, escape, and possible new worlds". In Kaleidoscope/London, explore 150 artworks, including 41 London-themed prints created exclusively for this new exhibition, plus a selection of tools and engraved wood blocks, spanning over three decades of Desmet’s documentation of London, through […]
This exhibition, Another View: Landscapes by Women Artists, examines women artists’ place in the history of British landscape art, a story traditionally dominated by male artists. Starting with early depictions by female amateur artists, the exhibition moves through the 19th and 20th centuries, presenting the changing ways women have looked at the outside world, and how […]
Hayal Pozanti's primary subject is the natural world and our relationship to it. In her daily life, she opens herself up to communing with and closely observing the environment: the texture of lichen, a stream of water, a glimmer of moths, or the old-growth maple trees that grow beside her Vermont home. With a remarkable […]
“All things are full of gods.”, an exhibition by Jana Emburey, borrows its title from a quote attributed to Thales of Miletus, an Ancient Greek pre-Socratic philosopher and one of the earliest proponents of unity of substance. The exhibition celebrates life, renewal and the unbreakable link between nature, humanity and the cosmos.
Liminal Spaces, is an exhibition of new works by Siji Krishnan, who presents a group of large-scale paintings and works on rice paper. The exhibition offers a continuation of Krishnan’s work in the spirit of the Perennial Upanishadic dictum, vasudhaiva kutumbakam: “the world is one family.” The artist builds her own sense of familial identity as […]
Pseudopodia, is an exhibition of new works by Molly Greene. The exhibition presents a suite of eight paintings that continue the artist’s investigation of amorphous forms, the internal and corporeality. The works depict forms which proliferate across the canvas with a fluidity of line, reproducing themselves through uncanny replications that playfully negotiate naturalness and […]
Watching the Perseids, is a new solo exhibition of work by Iris Schomaker. The exhibition presents new small-scale works on panel and paper, made over the past year, which continue Schomaker’s exploration of the generative tension between figuration and abstraction.
The exhibition takes its title, The Middle Voice, from a grammatical term and mode of speech which exists beyond a familiar distinction between the active and passive voices. It brings together works by Caroline Achaintre, Anna Higgins, Niamh O’Malley, Aimée Parrott, Stephen Polatch, and explores the possibility of expressing a middle-voiced view in visual terms – […]
Anne Rothenstein’s work transports viewers into a space where colour and form intertwine with everyday objects and landscapes to create profound emotional scenes. Using delicate layers of oil paint washes, Rothenstein builds a distinctive palette, layering her compositions with a luminous quality of depth and texture. Drawing inspiration from found imagery, personal experiences, and memories
‘Portals to The Past’, is an exhibition by Qian Qian. The exhibition advances Qian’s artistic explorations over the past five years, intertwining the realms of technology with mythology, the material with the spiritual, and the tangible with the transcendent. In addition to her latest watercolours on paper, the exhibition also features her first attempt at […]
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.
Show me the World Mister, is an exhibition by Ayo Akingbade comprising two new film commissions. Shot in location in Nigeria, The Fist and Faluyi are Akingbade's most ambitious productions to date, building upon her continued interest in history, place-making, legacy and power.
The exhibition, In the Perpetual Back and Forth, centres around 26,778,780 minutes, a new paper and text-based installation and accompanying sound piece which explores the dialogue between paper and writing. Featuring over 1000 sheets of laser-etched handmade abaca fibre paper, the work evokes a sense of absence and longing, considering the nuanced meanings of the […]