The Wick List

Viewing Homesick at the Sarabande Foundation

Sarabande Foundation’s annual celebratory exhibition to mark International Women’s Day is always a highlight at this time of year, bringing together resident artists from the Foundation’s studios. This year’s exhibition presents eleven Sarabande artists in an exhibition exploring notions of ‘home’.

Titled Homesick, the show considers the way home may be something in constant flux, a state of perpetual building and rebuilding, not a fixed idea or place. Conversations about home in relation to queerness, nomadism, and post-humanism naturally break with conventional interpretations of the domestic space and its artistic representation, sparking new conversations.

Highlights include Kasia Wozniak’s wet plate collodion photographs, dreamy and otherworldly contemplations of nostalgia and time, Bex Massey’s paintings of everyday objects and items drawn from childhood, reflecting on how our surroundings reflect values – or might hijack them – and Helena Lacy’s beautiful ceramic pieces, which look to nature for grounding.

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Dates
05 March 2025 — 12 March 2025
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The Wick Culture - Selah, 2025, Gabriel Moses. Image courtesy of 180 Studios
The Wick List

Viewing Gabriel Moses: Selah at 180 Studios

The Wick Culture - Me and Esme in a Korean Restaurant, 2024, Chantal Joffe. © Chantal Joffe, courtesy of the artist and Victoria Miro. Photos by Jack Hems.  
The Wick List

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The Wick Culture - Horizontal–Vaakasuora by Eija-Liisa Ahtila. Image courtesy of Kew Gardens
The Wick List

Viewing The Power of Trees at Kew Gardens

The Wick Culture - Amoako Boafo, Shoulder Stand, 2023. Amoako Boafo, Black Cycle, 2025. © Amoako Boafo, Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd, Courtesy Gagosian
The Wick List

Viewing Amoako Boafo at Gagosian London

The Wick Culture - Rose Wylie, Henry Triangle, 1996. Image courtesy of the artist and David Zwirner
The Wick List

Viewing Rose Wylie at David Zwirner

The Wick Culture - The neck from a stoneware bottle with a bearded face known as a Bartmann bottle 1500s – 1600s. The bearded face decorating the neck lies half-buried on the foreshore. Image courtesy of Alessio Checconi and London Museum
The Wick List

Viewing Secrets of the Thames at the London Museum