Category: English
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When mental states find material expression
Veronica Ryan: Multiple Conversations at Whitechapel Gallery surveys four decades of work through sculpture, collage and drawing. Moving beyond themes of migration and memory, the exhibition reveals Ryan’s exceptional ability to give physical form to psychological experience.
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The art of falling apart
Entering Tracey Emin’s exhibition feels less like stepping into a retrospective than into an exposed psychological landscape. Raw, intimate and emotionally charged, A Second Life is the most significant show of her career, and the most emotionally raw proposition on display right now.
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Painting without limits
Katharina Grosse transforms White Cube Bermondsey into a chromatic confrontation. High-frequency pigments, industrial spray and monumental scale combine to make a show where colour stops being something you see and becomes something you feel.
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Street photography that activates the scene
Helen Levitt is no “voyeur” waiting for a lucky break; she is a catalyst. A review of her work at Fundación Mapfre that analyses the street not as a backdrop, but as a performative device and a political battleground.
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Artworks in continuous transformation
Takesada Matsutani’s exhibition, Shifting Boundaries, at Hauser & Wirth London explores over six decades of work shaped by a tension between control and release, where materials are pushed to the point where form begins to emerge on its own.
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The creative director of his own myth
Theatre Picasso at Tate Modern reframes Pablo Picasso not as an isolated genius, but as the architect of his own artistic myth. Marking the centenary of The Three Dancers (1925), the exhibition reveals how he performed his Spanish identity, absorbed the energy of circus and ballet, and transformed painting into a cross-disciplinary stage that shaped…
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A Photographer with a fearless spirit
A visit to Tate Britain’s Lee Miller exhibition reveals an artist defined by poetic vision and fearless independence. Tracing her journey from fashion model to surrealist collaborator and war correspondent, the show finally gives full weight to one of the twentieth century’s most uncompromising photographic voices.
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Aboriginal art rooted in landscape
Discover the extraordinary work of Aboriginal artist Emily Kam Kngwarray at Tate Modern, London. From vibrant batiks to monumental canvases, her art maps the land, traditions, and Dreamings of her ancestral territory in a truly immersive exhibition running until 11 January 2026.


