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


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David Hockney’s “Drawing From Life” ran for just 20 days at the National Portrait Gallery in 2020 before it was cut short due to the pandemic. Don’t miss the next iteration, bolstered by over 30 new portraits of the friends and visitors to his Normandy studio between 2021 to 2022. Even Harry Styles is rendered in Hockney’s deceptively simple, yet confident hand, sporting a striped cardigan and pearls.

Among the original sitters were his mother, Celia Birtwell, Gregory Evans, Maurice Payne and the artist himself, all drawn with a rare intimacy and familiarity. This is Hockney the draughtsman at his very best.

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Dates
02 November 2023 — 21 January 2024
Over the last 50 years, the Japanese artist Hiroshi Sugimoto has stubbornly resisted the rise of digital technology, instead pushing the craft of analogue photography to the max – with radical results. Sugimoto often uses a large-format wooden camera, mixing his own darkroom chemicals and developing his black-and-white prints by hand. The quality of his work has to be admired in person – no insta snap will do.

The artist collapses time and stretches space in his work, making the Hayward Gallery’s survey show a mesmerising journey. It includes seminal pieces such as Theaters (1976 – ), a series shot in movie palaces and drive-ins, in which he captures entire films with a single long exposure, rendering all the dramatic action into one image of radiant whiteness. Also shown is Architecture (1997 -), his out-of-focus studies of iconic modernist buildings around the world, in which all their detail is blurred out, leaving behind just their ghostly silhouettes. Sugimoto shakes up both our understanding of the medium, and how we look at the world around us.

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Dates
11 October 2023 — 07 January 2024

Viewing Remi Rough at the House of St Barnabas

Londoners needing their spirits lifted should make a beeline for the House of St Barnabas to see the work of Remi Rough. His colour-saturated, abstract compositions are just the tonic. The hypnotic choreography of line, geometry and colour in his work recalls late 1980’s ‘wildstyle’ graffiti and his own street art beginnings. In ‘What Colour Does For The Fragile Mind,’ some pieces spring forth from the walls of the members’ club, while other works on paper bring a sense of the sculptural to the flat page.

Remi’s joyous compositions are a balm to the weary soul, which will be warmed further still by the fact that proceeds from the exhibition will go towards The House of St Barnabas’ charity, working to empower those affected by homelessness. Art for the heart in more ways than one.

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Dates
14 October 2023 — 30 April 2024
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The Wick Culture - Comedian, Maurizio Cattelan

Happenings Maurizio Cattelan’s Comedian

Happenings
The Wick Culture - David Bailey, Mary McCartney and Brandei Estes at Claridge's ArtSpace

Happenings 'DOUBLE EXPOSURE: David Bailey & Mary McCartney' at Claridge's ArtSpace

Happenings
The Wick Culture - Courts and Fields 4 ©Ishkar
Objects of Desire

Object Courts and Fields 4 rug, by Christopher Le Brun

Design
The Wick Culture - Viewing Remi Rough at the House of St Barnabas
Dream & Discover

Discover Roy Lichtenstein, Paper Shopping Bag

The Wick Culture - Gianna Dispenza (Puiyee Won)
Spotlight

Feature Gianna Dispenza explores the female sitter

Visual Arts
The Wick Culture - Half-Pint T-Shirt, Script x Charming Baker
Objects of Desire

Fashion Half-Pint T-shirt, Charming Baker x Script collaboration

Design, Fashion, Visual Arts