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 Ladbroke Hall unveils a new hidden garden in the heart of London

Back in London, Ladbroke Hall – the arts and social club in Notting Hill – is set to reveal the latest addition to its cultural offering, with a landscaped garden, spanning 12,500 square feet, envisioned by 2014 Chelsea Flower Show winner Luciano Giubbilei. Opening to the public as summer begins, the landscaped design, featuring bamboo, acers, maple trees and hydrangeas, will also be home to a Jean Prouvé-designed private dining space and outdoor restaurant.

Coinciding with the opening of its garden on 16 May, Ladbroke Hall also presents a group exhibition spanning spaces inside and out, MONUMENTAL, exploring the theme of scale in historical design. At the Carpenters Workshop Gallery, a new iteration of Yinka Shonibare’s CBE RA, Windy Chair, will be on view, originally commissioned in 2014 for Design Miami, Windy Chair is a limited-edition series, connected to the Wind Sculptures series, mimicking fabric caught in the wind. And you’ll also be able to see a new body of work by the Australian artist, Charles Trevelyan.

Now we just need the weather to comply.

Share story
Dates
17 May 2024

Viewing Intricate hand-assembled collages by Sharon Walters

“If we don’t see ourselves represented back, it can act as a barrier to not succeeding”

Former Spotlight on The Wick and London-based artist, educator and project curator Sharon Walters is debuting her first London solo exhibition “Seeing Ourselves” at Hackelbury Fine Art. With meticulous hand-assembled collages, Walters celebrates the multifaceted identities of Black women, reshaping narratives and redefining cultural landscapes.

Drawing from diverse sources, including magazine clippings and personal photographs, she crafts a narrative of empowerment and representation. The title ‘Seeing Ourselves’ references the book by Frances Borzello which surveyed centuries of self portraits by white Western women artists. Walter’s work is a response to this absence of their own reflections in mainstream Western media, arts and cultural life.

In 2023, Walters was included in the group exhibition ‘Like Paradise,’ curated by Ekow Eshun, at Claridge’s ArtSpace.

Share story
Dates
10 May 2024 — 06 July 2024
It’s over to Rome this week, for a special group exhibition curated by Catherine Loewe exploring famous artist couples. How do famous artist couples inspire each other? How does their passion influence their work? And when things get acrimonious – what happens to their art? Loewe’s salacious and intriguing premise for Tête-à-Tête suggests new ways of looking at well-known artists and their works, and unfolds a larger question about human relationships and creativity in general.

Presenting works by eight artist couples in dialogue with each other, the exhibition looks at the way artists’ romantic relationships behind closed doors inform and shape their professional lives and artistic practices – whether they work together, or separately: Charlotte and Philip Colbert, Annie Morris and Idris Khan, Shirin Neshat and Shoja Azari, and Nick and Rob Carter, are included, among others. Expect sparks to fly – as Loewe puts it “while relationships can be fertile ground for creativity, they are not without their challenges, requiring a high degree of tolerance and compromise, particularly when it comes to navigating the creative process.”

Loewe adds that “the mystery of two souls connected lies at the heart of this exhibition which celebrates love, union and the alchemy that happens when visions are shared and lives intertwined.”

Share story
Dates
09 May 2024 — 06 July 2024
READ MORE