Our top picks of exhibitions together with cultural spaces and places, both online and in the real world.


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Viewing Candida Höfer: Libraries, museums and a theatre

Drink in the mesmerising charm of Candida Höfer at Ben Brown Fine Arts. The photographer’s eighth solo show at the London gallery includes a selection of spectacular photographs of empty libraries, museums and a theatre across Europe. Devoid of human figures, these sumptuous spaces assume an eerie monumentality, prompting the viewer to consider the essence and history of a space in isolation.

Höfer favours compositional symmetry, a relatively high vantage point and a vibrant sense of colour, as is evident in the works on display here. Also apparent is her technical perfection and highly conceptual approach, likely honed under the tutelage of German conceptual artists and photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher.

Among the star exhibits is Villa Borghese Roma I 2012, which depicts a series of sculptures that were first owned by Galleria Borghese, sold to French collectors, and then loaned by the Louvre to the Galleria. Also featured in the show are two engrossing works from Höfer’s Louvre series, taken when the museum was closed to the public.

There is something intriguing about seeing familiar spaces in unfamiliar ways. Which is perhaps why Höfer’s work draws you in so deeply.

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Dates
22 November 2021 — 28 January 2022
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Viewing Tunji Adeniyi-Jones: That Which Binds Us

Ablaze with brilliant colour, the paintings of London-born, New York-based Tunji Adeniyi-Jones explores the relationship between figure and ground, while also addressing the history of the Black experience. Often beginning with studies in ink pen or watercolour on paper, he builds his canvases through repetition, colour and form, invoking the ritualised repetition integral to ceremonial processes. He draws inspiration from a wide range of sources, including his Yoruba heritage and West African mythology, as well as his travels and multi-cultural upbringing.

For his first exhibition at White Cube, Adeniyi-Jones presents bold, new paintings that focus on expressive figuration. ‘The figures in my work are expressions of my identity and there is something very rewarding about using the body as a vehicle for storytelling,’ he says.

You’ll be confronted by muscular bodies engaged in ritual dance-like movements or classical posturing every which way you look. They are strong and dynamic and flow freely across the canvas, creating a sense of pulsating energy through the picture plane. Not to be missed are Poetic Feet I, II and III, executed in a rich palette of pinks, reds and oranges; and Five Virtues, a new monochrome sugar-lift aquatint depicting five figures dancing and gesturing, each a personification of a moral attribute. No doubt these works will fly!

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Dates
19 November 2021 — 09 January 2022
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Viewing Fabergé in London: Romance to Revolution

Think of Fabergé and glorious visions of jewelled enamel Easter eggs spring to mind. These magnificent objets d’art, however, represent only a fraction of the house’s artistic creation.

Bringing together around 200 objects, Fabergé in London: Romance to Revolution tells the story of Carl Fabergé, the master Russian goldsmith, and his internationally recognised firm, while also exploring the Anglo-Russian relationship which saw the opening of a branch in London in 1903.

It was Fabergé’s trademark ability to transform everyday objects into opulent works of art that made the House so famous across Europe: royalty, aristocrats, heiresses, exiled Russian Grand Dukes, socialites and financiers flocked there to purchase gifts of unparalleled luxury. Many of these are now on display for the first time in the UK.

Highlights include the recently rediscovered Third Imperial Egg of 1887, found by a scrap dealer in 2011; and the rock crystal Peacock Egg of 1907-8, shown on public display for the first time in over a decade. Also worthy of note are a silver model portrait of Persimmon, King Edward VII’s most loved and successful racehorse; a notebook given by Emperor Nicholas II and his wife to Queen Victoria for Christmas in 1896; and a sparkling aquamarine and diamond tiara. Prepare to be spellbound.

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Dates
20 November 2021 — 08 May 2022
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