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


All, Art, Auctions, Exhibitions, Travel & Hospitality, Initiatives

Viewing Frieze & Frieze Masters

It’s a bumper edition of The Wick List this week, as the biggest week in the contemporary art calendar kicks off. Of course, at the undisputed centre are Frieze London (for contemporary art) and Frieze Masters (where you’ll find everything from millennia back to the present). This year is especially exciting for visiting Frieze as it reveals a brand new layout, with natural light and a new flow around the booths.

Returning to the main fair is the recent popular recent addition, Artist-to-Artist, where well-established names select up-and-comings to exhibit at the fair: look out for our favourites, Nengi Omuku, selected by Yinka Shonibare, and Peter Uka, selected by Hurvin Anderson, both exceptional painters with a knack for group portraits and incredible storytelling. There’s also the curated section, this year titled Smoke and devoted to ceramic works from non-western practitioners of the ancient art form.

At Frieze Masters, we’re looking forward to seeing Sheen Wagstaff’s curated section Studio, returning for a second year, and in an expanded form, reflecting on the process of making with presentations by the likes of Nathalie Du Pasquier and Doris Salcedo. There are also solo presentations by radical 20th century masters in a showcase titled Spotlight, focused this year on artists from the 1950s – 1970s; Judy Chicago, Balraj Khanna, Kulim Kim, Donald Locke, Nabil Nahas and Nil Yalter. We can’t wait to see.

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Dates
09 October 2024 — 13 October 2024

Viewing 1-54 Contemporary Art Fair

Of course, there’s so much else going on to coincide with Frieze week. One of the most popular satellite fairs is 1-54, the fair – led by Founding Director Touria El Glaoui – dedicated solely to contemporary art from the African continent and its broad diaspora. Bringing together galleries from around the world in a range of mediums at Somerset House, 1-54 continues to lead the way forward in an international market that is still weighted towards the west.

This year’s fair will see 37 international galleries from 17 countries showcase work by more than 110 artists – a significant representation of the very best contemporary African artists working today. This year’s courtyard installation has been created by none other than Slawn, the young London-based Nigerian artist also known as Olaolu Akeredolu-Ale. His project, Transition, involves two iconic London double-decker buses – over 10 metres long and 4 metres high.

Also worth visiting is a partnership between Somerset House and 1-54, a retrospective exhibition devoted to the late Leila Alaoui, the French-Moroccan artist, photographer and activist who died in 2016 while working on a women’s rights campaign with Amnesty International. Alaoui was caught in gunfire during a terrorist attack in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, and three days later died of her wounds. Honouring Alaoui’s photographic practice, the exhibition includes three of Alaoui’s defining series of works – Les Marocains, No Pasara and Natreen, as well as Alaoui’s final unfinished video work L’Île du Diable (Devil’s Island), exploring the lives of a 1960s generation of dispossessed migrant workers in France.

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Dates
13 October 2024 — 16 October 2024

Viewing Enchanted Alchemies: Magic, Mysticism and the Occult in Art

Magic, mysticism and the occult have been something of hot topics in art again recently – in part due to revisiting the surrealists to mark the centenary year of the movement this year. Lévy Gorvy Dayan’s timely exhibition places historical figures such as Eileen Agar, Leonora Carrington, Ithell Colquhoun and Leonor Fini in conversation with more recent works by artists still active and prominent today, from Alejandro Jodorowsky to Bharti Kher, Linder, and Goshka Macuga.

It’s a major affair: more than fifty works feature, spanning painting, sculpture, ceramic, watercolour, and collage, sharing a sensibility and interest in the magical and mystical, the transformative and the alchemical.

The exhibition moves between works by British Surrealist, Colquhoun, explorations of an all-encompassing and dynamic force beyond what we might be able to see or perceive, to Jodorowsky’s Enchanted Alchemies – lending their name to the show’s title – the filmmaker, visual artist, and comic book writer, who worked with Carrington and continues a practice that engages with magical concepts today, rooted deeply in a Surrealist mysticism. A fascinating insight into a universe of alternative ways of seeing, being and relating to one another.

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Dates
01 October 2024 — 21 December 2024
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