Barbie: The Exhibition at The Design Museum celebrates the 65th anniversary of Mattel’s iconic doll. Following last year’s Barbie film, it highlights the doll’s design history and appeals to adult collectors, as well as enthusiasts of manufacturing, brand development, and marketing…
Read MoreThe Tate presents an exhibition tracing the evolution of artist McCall's pioneering approach to cinema, transforming passive viewing into immersive participation. Drawing from their archives, the Tate features McCall's seminal work "Line Describing a Cone 1973", acquired in 2005, as a centrepiece of the show….
Read MoreThe major exhibition ‘NAOMI: In Fashion’ showcases over 100 items that encapsulate Naomi Campbell's four-decade career, offering a visual history of fashion through her iconic wardrobe…
Read MoreTavares Strachan is celebrated for his boundary-pushing global exhibitions. The Hayward Gallery is currently presenting a mid-career survey of his work titled There Is Light Somewhere, exploring his remarkable projects and innovative approach to contemporary art…
Read MoreThe opening documentary of this year’s SAFAR Film Festival is a moving, first-person account of Mohamed Jabaly’s experience of travelling abroad and finding himself stranded…
Read MoreSadlers Wells concluded their Flamenco Festival with one of Spain’s most important dance companies, Ballet Nacional de España, for an evening entitled Invocación…
Read MoreREVERB features 18 installations including new works. The range, variety and duration of the installations is a lot to take in and for the music enthusiasts there should almost be a warning to set aside a decent chunk of time.
Read MoreThis is a high-energy and ambitious production that forces its audience to reconsider the motivations of one of history’s most notorious kings…
Read MoreThe play is a solemn, gripping family drama with three strong and differing characters taking place on a simple set of sofa, rug, coffee table, laundry basket, a tv live streaming the Texas-Mexican border and a tattered American Flag.
Read MoreThe play is a rom com of sorts and uses music which should be familiar from the likes of Nina Simone, Britney and Lady Sovereign, with altered lyrics to fit the narrative. Songs such as You’re So Pretty When You Cry and the final Solidarity Song…
Read MoreThe Globe’s 2024 summer season is off to a flying start with a joyous romp through one of Shakespeare’s much-loved comedies…
Read MoreNow, I See is a moving theatrical production that follows two brothers as they come together to celebrate the life of their late sibling.Through a blend of music, movement, and poignant memories, the performance delves into the intricacies of grief…
Read MoreFollowing a long hiatus from these otherwise gloomy shores, scores of people full of sun-induced joy and optimism flocked to the Barbican to bear witness to Shabaka Hutchings.
Read MoreThe ‘Mr Nasty of American Theatre’ gets his comeuppance in this comedic dissection of the white male artist, which lifts the lid on issues that continue to plague the creative industries…
Read MoreOriginal music and writing from social enterprise theatre company Big House hits all the right notes in its powerful examination of censorship and the role art plays in helping marginalised communities find their voice.
Read MoreVibrant expressionism: Kandinsky, Münter, and the Blue Rider exhibition takes Tate Modern by storm..
Read MoreThe Untold and Untrue Story has arrived in London for a three-week run at the King’s Head Theatre in Islington. Let me start by saying it is the best and silliest kind of fun and the most I’ve laughed in such a short space of time.
Read MoreBrixton’s Brockwell Park is having a very busy summer. Only a day after the jazz and soul showcase of Cross the Tracks, the 50-hectare park hosted the reggae and dancehall festival City Splash. For its third year, City Splash welcomed more than 60 Caribbean and African music acts to a 30,000 strong audience in South London…
Read MoreReview of Quality Street at the exquisite Richmond Theatre. The romantic comedy by JM Barrie first took to the stage in 1901 and has been updated in this recent production by Northern Broadsides and the New Vic….
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