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


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Viewing Henry Moore, Hauser & Wirth Somerset

Get yourself to Hauser & Wirth Somerset to see the buzzy new exhibition of works by Henry Moore. Curated by Hannah Higham of the Henry Moore Foundation in collaboration with the artist’s daughter, Mary Moore, it examines the artist’s early fascination with the Neolithic site of Stonehenge and continued exploration of the upright abstract form. Also under consideration is his career-long investigations into scale, material and volume.

Installed across the garden and all five galleries, the exhibition brings together seminal works from across his six-decade career, including four towering bronze Upright Motive sculptures and Locking Piece (1962-63), which is made up of two large interconnecting forms stacked one on top of the other.

You’ll also encounter a significant series of etchings and lithographs depicting the site of Stonehenge, dating from 1972, and around 100 items from Moore’s studio. Shown together, they provide a rare insight into the working life of the modernist sculptor.

Once you’ve worked up an appetite exploring the exhibition and Piet Oudolf’s glorious garden, take yourself to Roth Bar and Grill for lunch. Order the pan fried sea bass before tucking into the rhubarb and custard pavlova. Trust us, you won’t regret it.

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Dates
28 May 2022 — 04 September 2022

Viewing Among the Machines

Make time to see Among the Machines at London’s Zabludowicz Collection, a major new exhibition of works from the collection examining how humans interact with machines and non-human entities. Rather daringly, it also considers how we will respond to a stage of evolution beyond the human.

It features 13 international artists, including Anicka Yi, Rebecca Allen and Simon Denny, who are engaging with various technologies to critically reflect on our current moment of change. Together, they tackle everything from new types of consciousness and alternative evolutionary branches to the impact of technology on our sense of individual and collective identity, and our relationship to the planet.

Shown alongside video, sculpture and interactive computer installations are new augmented reality artworks created in direct response to the gallery space. This is a mindboggling show, but it’s well worth a whiz round.

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Viewing Cornelia Parker at Tate Britain

Cornelia Parker came to prominence in the late 1980s with such experimental works as Thirty Pieces of Silver (1988-89), a large-scale installation of suspended and flattened silver objects including teapots, candlesticks and dinnerware. Then came Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View (1991), a garden shed frozen at the moment of explosion, its fragments surrounding a single lightbulb.

This eye-catching artwork currently hangs at the heart of a magnificent and long-overdue retrospective at Tate Britain. Featuring over 90 artworks spanning immersive installations, sculptures, film, photography and drawing, as well as two new works created especially for the exhibition, it charts Parker’s exploration of contemporary issues such as violence, human rights, politics and environmental disaster.

Other notable highlights include War Room (2015), a vast gallery created from the reams of perforated red paper negatives left over from the production of British Legion remembrance poppies, and Magna Carta (An Embroidery), also from 2015, which comprises a thirteen-metre long collectively hand-sewn embroidery of a Wikipedia page. In the cinema room, you’ll see several films Parker made during the election campaign leading up to the 2017 General Election.

Uniting the ‘poetic and the spectacular’, this mesmerising show is not to be missed!

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Dates
16 May 2022 — 16 August 2022
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