iVisit... Beano: The Art of Breaking the Rules
Dennis and Gnasher, Minnie the Minx, Bananaman and the rest of the Beano gang take over Somerset House this autumn in a contemporary celebration of the world’s longest-running comic.
Dennis and Gnasher, Minnie the Minx, Bananaman and the rest of the Beano gang take over Somerset House this autumn in a contemporary celebration of the world’s longest-running comic.
Three of Monet’s most spectacular large paintings of water lilies will be brought together at the National Gallery in September 2021 in the first-ever exhibition of decorative arts by the Impressionist painters.
The announcement comes as a new slate of events for Inside Out, an online season of music and literature are released. This next instalment of the popular digital series will see the Southbank Centre’s Resident Orchestras performing at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, marking the first time the much-loved venue has been open since it closed last March due to Covid-19.
On Monday 12th April, to celebrate non-essential retail opening in the UK, London’s iconic Oxford Street will be transformed into a futuristic work of art by world-renowned light sculptor Anthony James.
A first-look image has been released for the National Theatre’s Romeo & Juliet, a feature film for broadcast on Sky Arts and PBS this April.
On World Theatre Day March 27th, Rise Up With Arts brings you exclusive performances and interviews, from stars you know and love from stage and screen.
The annual literary festival New Suns returns for a weekend of talks, workshops and a film centred around feminist storytelling. The weekend will feature acclaimed writers, activists, artists, and academics including adrienne maree brown, Season Butler and Dorothea Lasky.
The Royal Opera House is proud to continue its #OurHouseToYourHouse programme with Tony and the Young Artists, a celebration of music and song on Friday 19 February at 7pm GMT and their next Friday Premiere, The Royal Ballet’s The Sleeping Beauty on Friday 26 February at 7pm GMT.
The Barbican announces a new programme of music and films On Demand, alongside fresh and existing digital content, inspired by the Barbican’s international arts programme. A curated mix of streams, podcasts, playlists, films, videos, talks and articles enables audiences to continue to enjoy the Centre’s rich and varied programme from home or on the go during its temporary closure and beyond.
The Royal Opera House is delighted to continue its #OurHouseToYourHouse programme, featuring a suite of online broadcasts that can be accessed by audiences around the world for just £3.
Enjoy a specially-curated tour of the five-star exhibition from the comfort of your home featuring exclusive interviews from legendary musicians and designers.
What better way to celebrate the festive period than with this much-loved production, streamed into homes around the world for the first time.
From your phone, or computer, at home or on your local walk, you’ll be transported through London’s iconic streets and hear the stories of Londoners who have gone before.
You can enjoy PETRICHOR in person at Stratford East in their socially-distanced space or online from the comfort of your own home.
The National Theatre Live broadcast of WAR HORSE, the unforgettable Olivier and Tony Award®-winning theatrical event based on Michael Morpurgo’s beloved novel, will return to cinemas around the UK and Ireland for the first time since its original live broadcast in 2014.
Ben and Gus have a job to do. But as they await instructions in a derelict building, they start to receive strange messages via a dumb waiter...
A new display by Rosalind Nashashibi, the first Artist in Residence of the National Gallery, was announced today. It will be on view from 3 December 2020 to 21 February 2021.
Featuring works by children from 37 different primary schools, the exhibition showcases the richness of children's creative responses to Bellows's painting – from model ships and polluted cityscapes to family interviews and letters home.
In 17th-century Europe, at a time when women artists were not easily accepted, Artemisia was exceptional. She challenged conventions and defied expectations to become a successful artist and one of the greatest storytellers of her time.
RIBA have now launched their FREESTYLE Social VR Space, bringing you their critically acclaimed exhibition into your own living room.
Death of England: Delroy by Clint Dyer and Roy Williams and directed by Dyer, explores what it is like to be a Black working-class man searching for truth and confronting his relationship with Great Britain. The role of Delroy is performed by Michael Balogun.
In this socially distanced, visually-led exhibition, the experience of work and play at sea will be displayed through the lens of six seafarers and researchers.
Take your first step into Jan Gossaert’s world of intricate detail, technical mastery and rich meaning in a new Gallery experience where you’ll be surrounded by the sights and sounds of his 500-year-old masterpiece.
One of Britain’s greatest artists, J.M.W. Turner lived and worked at the peak of the industrial revolution. Find out more and visit this exhibition at Tate Britain.
The National Theatre has announced it is creating a new filmed version of Romeo & Juliet for television, temporarily transforming the vast stage spaces of its Lyttelton theatre into a film studio to capture Shakespeare’s timeless play for a new generation of audiences.
This display marks the launch of Network Rail’s new customised typeface, Rail Alphabet 2, designed by her in close collaboration with Henrik Kubel in response to a new wayfinding system at Network Rail stations designed by Spaceagency.
The central theme of this exhibition is the quiet of catastrophe’s aftermath, a solemnity that points as much towards modes of resilience and adaptation as it does to the crushing devastation of loss.
As well as his iconic pop images of Marilyn Monroe, Coca-Cola and Campbell’s soup cans, it includes works never seen before in the UK.
Riba’s latest exhibition at 66 Portland Place will take you on a journey through time from the Renaissance to postmodernism, through virtual reality.
The 1930s were a pivotal decade for British avantgarde architecture. Despite the relative paucity of modernist buildings being commissioned, by 1937 the country had, for a brief moment, become the epicentre of progressive contemporary architecture in Europe.