Skip to main content

Jaki Irvine @ De La Warr Pavilion

De La Warr Pavilion

Jaki Irvine works across video, installation, photography, music composition, and writing to explore the complex ways we imagine ourselves and the world around us. For Irvine, this process has both philosophical and political dimensions.  She weaves real events into films and videos that reflect on the fragmented, mysterious and often absurd nature of the human […]

Aileen Murphy @ Amanda Wilkinson, London

Amanda Wilkinson Gallery

‘Crackers for Lorelei’ presents a series of colourful oil paintings. The exhibition is supported with a grant from Culture Ireland.

Alia Ahmad @ White Cube

White Cube Bermondsey

Alia Ahmad’s vibrant, expressionistic paintings draw inspiration from memories and observations of her native Riyadh; informed by local textiles, poetry, calligraphy, digital graphics and the rich diversity of the surrounding industrialised desert landscape and plant life.

Sue Atkinson @ Moon Grove Gallery

Moon Grove Gallery 7 Moon Grove, Manchester, United Kingdom

Sue and Terry Atkinson's exhibition combines drawings and paintings with a prescient relationship to current geopolitical events. The work of both artists have focussed on overtly radical subject matter since the 1960s, with the potency of their work becoming stronger over time.

Ella Kruglyanskaya @ Thomas Dane Gallery, London

Thomas Dane Gallery

Ella Kruglyanskaya's show 'Shadows' will assemble a group of new paintings that explore the nature of artistic influence and the enduring conversation about the future of painting. Kruglyanskaya’s monograph, Too Much, has been published to coincide with this exhibtion.

Claudia Pagès Rabal @ Chisenhale Gallery

Chisenhale Gallery

Claudia Pagès Rabal’s practice intertwines words, bodies, music, and movement. Five Defence Towers, a new moving image commission, tells a tale of surveillance, control, settlement, and refuge across five acts.

Daria Blum @ Palmer Gallery, London

Palmer Gallery 15 Hatton St., Lisson Grove, London, United Kingdom

Daria Blum works across video, music, text, photography, installation and performance. This show is based on her reflections on the role of the live performer, and her own attempts at deflecting and withdrawing from the audience’s gaze and attention.

Debjani Bannerjee @ Karst Gallery

Karst Gallery 22 George Place, Millbay, Plymouth, United Kingdom

Debjani Banerjee’s exhibition, Jalsaghar, is an intricate exploration of identity, culture, and heritage. The exhibition navigates themes of cultural migration and the evolving nature of identity.

Alison Watt @ Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery

Pitzhanger Manor , United Kingdom

From Light, includes 18 new paintings created specifically for the gallery. The title reflects the centrality of light in both Watt’s work and that of Sir John Soane, the architect of Pitzhanger, in harnessing light to shape space and create atmosphere. For Watt, light is the ‘very substance of painting’, while for Soane, it defined […]

Agnieszka Polska @ Union Pacific

Union Pacific Gallery 15 West Central St, London, United Kingdom

In her exhibition, The Book of Flowers, Agnieszka Polska uses cinematic storytelling and affective technologies,  to address the perpetually negotiated relationship between human and technology. She examines the processes that mutually influence and legitimate this relationship in language, history and consciousness.

Divine Southgate-Smith @ Nicoletti Gallery, London

Nicoletti Contemporary

In Navigator, Divine Southgate-Smith magnifies archival photographs to the point of dissolution. It is an exhibition about movement – the movement of history, memory, and ideas across time.

Alma Berrow @ LAMB, London

LAMB Gallery

The Opening of a Crisp Packet is a show about storytelling and an installation of new ceramic works by Alma Berrow.

Alison Watt @ Lévy Gorvy Dayan, London

Levy Gorvy Dayan , United Kingdom

This show is presentation of new works by Alison Watt, timed to coincide with her solo exhibition at Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery, London. Watt’s still life paintings are distinguished by a deft realism informed by perception, memory, and art historical research.

Sophie Birch and Rachel Youn @ Alice Amati, London

Alice Amati Gallery , United Kingdom

Birch’s paintings examine the unseen forces that shape aural and tactile perception. Youn’s kinetic sculptures confront the tension between pleasure and discomfort, using devices like massagers to examine the relation of function and desire.

Elena Gaul @ Sketch Gallery

Sketch Gallery 9 Conduit St, London, United Kingdom

The Silent Game, is an exhibition by Elena Gaul, which takes inspiration from a chessboard, with paintings setting the rhythm of the game.  Balancing between structure and expression, Gaul’s work invites viewers to pause, observe, and perhaps discover their own move in the game of shapes and colours.

Jacqueline Poncelet @ Richard Saltoun

Richard Saltoun

Jacqueline Poncelet's, exhibition spans fifty years of work in, this, that and the other.  It brings together Poncelet’s early sculptural ceramics, large-scale drawings, and small paintings from the 1970-1980s, with recent watercolours, tracing a continuous dialogue between material, process, and pattern across diverse media.

Kristina Chan @ Canada Gallery

Canada Gallery

Kristina Chan's work oscillates between photography and printmaking and the science – and artistry – behind mark-making. Fascinated by the relationship between these two processes, Chan explores their ties to site-specificity and truth, to memory, time and space in Habitable Climes.

Cecilia Reeve @ Twilight Contemporary, London

Twilight Contemporary 378 Essex Rd, London, United Kingdom

What the Water Gave Them showcases new paintings and animations by Cecilia Reeve that delve into themes of submersion, ritual, and renewal.

Magdalena Skupinska @ Maxmillian William

Maxmillian William Gallery

Soft crossing, Magdalena Skupinska’s exhibition, takes shape through the slow and meditative work of gathering, grinding, and layering – altered by time, steeped in the rhythms of growth and decay. Her works do not settle into stillness, but emerge from the earth, formed by the elements, taking pigment and texture from nature’s own store.  

Anne Rothenstein @ Stephen Friedman Gallery, London

Stephen Friedman Gallery , United Kingdom

Anne Rothenstein’s exhibition of new paintings comprises portraits, landscapes and interiors. Often working on panel, she layers thin washes of oil to suggest ripples, cloud and wave patterns which lend a sparse, elemental composition rhythm and depth.