Jade Fadojutimi @ Peer London
Peer LondonThe Numbing Vibrancy of Characters in Play, are new paintings by Jadé Fadojutimi in her first solo exhibition in the UK, which includes large-scale works specially created for the gallery’s street-facing […]
The Numbing Vibrancy of Characters in Play, are new paintings by Jadé Fadojutimi in her first solo exhibition in the UK, which includes large-scale works specially created for the gallery’s street-facing […]
A fortnight of tears, is a solo exhibition by Tracey Emin of new paintings, photography, large-scale bronze sculptures and film, which will be presented across the entire Bermondsey gallery.
Out of this World, is a group exhibition of international female artists who are currently shaping the language of figuration: Heidi Hahn, Donna Huddleston, Becky Kolsrud, Naudline Pierre, Mathilde Rosierand Antonia Showering. The […]
The exhibition looks at the link between Literature and Art with a focus on how the book "The Magic Lamp: Dreams of our Age" is a wonderful and creative collaboration between Art and Literature. The exhibition includes images from the book, some new paintings and some text based works. Extracts from the book guide the viewer […]
Flora Yukhnovich’s paintings trace connections between a visual language originating in the Rococo with contemporary popular culture, examining and questioning how notions of femininity, taste and beauty have been encoded and restated throughout art history before becoming entrenched within the contemporary aesthetic. The diverse sources for her work are drawn from art history — specifically […]
This is the first retrospective in the UK of the Egyptian-Canadian artist of Armenian origin, Anna Boghiguian. She is informed by her interest in philosophy and her continuous travels, Boghiguian's […]
Still I Rise: Feminisms, Gender, Resistance, Act II explores the history of resistance and alternative forms of living from the perspective of gender from the late 19th century to the present and […]
An exhibition of late works by British abstract painter Sandra Blow. Blow was a leading figure of the abstract movement in Britain in the second half of the twentieth-century. The […]
Lily Myers produces communities of handmade objects, prints, drawings, and text that are used to explore an ongoing interest in underlying social conventions. Cups, bags, and forks have become strong symbols in her work, referencing ideas surrounding domesticity, play, labour and consumption.
Jacqui Hallum’s paintings, Berber Carpet, draw on imagery ranging from medieval woodcuts and leaded glass windows to tarot cards and Art Nouveau children’s book illustrations. She works across a number of loose cotton sheets, staining and dying them with drawing ink, graffiti ink and squid ink. The sheets move between Hallum’s studio and garden throughout this […]
The Journey of Things, brings together more than 50 of Magdalene Odundo’s vessels alongside a large selection of historic and contemporary objects which she has curated to reveal the vast range of references from around the globe that have informed the development of her unique work.
An exhibition of Carey Young’s, Palais de Justice (2017) which was filmed surreptitiously at the Palais de Justice in Brussels, an enormous and ornate 19th Century courthouse designed to depict law in terms of the sublime. The film contradicts the familiar patriarchal culture of law, as Young’s camera depicts female judges and lawyers at court. Sitting […]
British artist Anne Hardy curates the Arts Council Collection in Towner’s eighth and final exhibition as part of the Arts Council Collection National Partners Programme 2016-19. Anne's work derives from places she calls ‘pockets of wild space’ – gaps in the urban space where materials, atmospheres, and emotions gather – using what she finds there to […]
Discover the childhood sketches of Beatrix Potter. As a young girl Beatrix Potter showed keen design skills. This display tracks the development of Potter's artistry by showcasing examples of her childhood sketches and domestic projects alongside her adored, famous illustrations that came later.
A survey of new work by Georgie Hopton, who treats her garden as a palette, growing abundant produce on the Upstate New York farm she shares with her husband, the […]
Janice Kerbal is interested in how fights can both erupt and dissipate, unannounced, regardless of context or setting. For Fight (2018), a series of silkscreen posters, she choreographed an unarmed fight for a group of 12 individuals. Every action of the fight was recorded on life size sheets of paper using text.
On the face of it, Phyllida Barlow’s vibrant, large-scale sculptures are always at the point of tipping off an edge, becoming too heavy and unbalanced to stand freely, or overrunning the […]
Juliette Paull’s most recent body of work, Profile & Paintings, explores a continuously unfolding visual connection to the landscape within Baroque painting. The notion of romanticism and the sublime is of […]
Julia Patience uses watercolour and inks on paper, which enables her to paint fine detail, while being botanically correct. She aims to inspire rather than merely inform.
This exhibition, Interval, showcases a collection of oil paintings depicting the Suffolk Coast, by Rachel Arif. Her semi-abstract works are almost Turner-esque in style – reflecting the dramatic and changeable landscape of heaths, […]