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


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The American conceptual artist returns to London this week with a new solo exhibition at Pace’s London gallery showcasing a new body of retroreflective collage pieces. Thomas has long been interested in the medium and its ability to carry histories, fragmented forms articulating the experiences and impact of colonialism and globalism. Drawing on major figures from Matisse to Romare Bearden – the kindred creative souls for the work – Thomas lights his own path in the medium.

The collages incorporate images from the artist’s ongoing research into historical protests and activist movements all over the globe, as well as protest material from the UK, weaving a broad narrative that gives a soaring sense of interconnected struggles – another take on the ‘kinship of the soul’ that the show’s title alludes to.

Thomas’ use of retroreflective vinyl – usually found in road signs – is also worth noting. Thomas has been experimenting with the material for almost a decade, and they create an incredible illusory effect that has to be seen in person, the layers and light creating their own rhythms and dialogues between archival and personal records, and adding nuance to the artist’s explorations of figuration and abstraction.

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Dates
20 November 2024 — 21 December 2024

Viewing Self-Made: Reshaping Identities at The Foundling Museum

People have been making sense of themselves through clay for centuries; one of the world’s most ancient forms of art has represented our physical connection with earth and has long articulated the way we understanding our presence here in relation to it.

Self-Made is a fresh look at an age-old subject, exploring the work of four contemporary artists who innovate with clay in different ways: Phoebe Collings-James, Rachel Kneebone, Matt Smith and Renee So. Each artist adapts the malleable medium differently but they share a sensibility, using clay as an embodied expression of the constructed self.

This beautiful exhibition touches on class, gender, sexuality, heritage and legacy as passed on through clay – a potent reminder of how we can find new forms for ourselves in a literal, physical way, moulding the material to reflect inner worlds and experiences. This show represents an exciting connection with the Foundling Museum’s long-established mission to preserve stories around identity, care and belonging – and extends an invention to consider how we can keep reinventing ourselves, a message we all need to hear in these times.

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Dates
15 November 2024 — 01 June 2025

Viewing Women & Freud: Patients, Pioneers, Artists

Women played an important and intriguing role in the development, and dissemination of, Freud’s theories and practice. The authors of ‘Freud’s Women’, the curators Lisa Appignanesi and Bryony Davies’ have drawn on their extensive research for the exhibition Women & Freud: Patients, Pioneers, Artists, exploring the influence Freud’s female collaborators, from the early “hysterics”, the psychoanalyst referred to as ‘his teachers’, to later patients who would go on to become analysts. Several of those analysts – including Joan Riviere and Alix Strachey – worked on the translation of his Complete Works at Hogarth Press, first published 100 years ago.

Images, objects and footage bring the story of these women vividly to life. The room dedicated to Anna, Freud’s daughter, at the museum, will be brought into the dialogue of the show with new materials, and a new installation by ceramic artist Abigail Schama. Moving through the museum, Freud’s impact on artists such as Louise Bourgeois, Paula Rego, and Tracey Emin is explored, as well as other female members of Freud’s family, and important symbolic female figures, such as his female goddesses and Gradiva – the figure that inspired Freud’s influential 1907 essay.

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Dates
30 October 2024 — 05 May 2025
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