8th September 2021
Jean Dubuffet
Walking in…
Jean Dubuffet ‘Tour aux recits’ polyurethane paint on epoxy resin, 1973-2007. Smithson Plaza, 25-27 St. James’s Street, SW1.
8th September 2021
Jean Dubuffet ‘Tour aux recits’ polyurethane paint on epoxy resin, 1973-2007. Smithson Plaza, 25-27 St. James’s Street, SW1.
8th September 2021
Gilbert & George, infamous art duo, create artworks that explore and expose universal ideologies in religion, society and culture directly, through personal performance, images and text. They are provocateurs and although their work has been exhibited widely across the world and throughout the art establishment, they remain outsider agitators. In their own words,
6th September 2021
Tracey Emin ‘Keep Me Safe’ neon, 2006.
20th September 2020
Heather Phillipson ‘THE END’ steel and polystyrene, 2020, Trafalgar Square, WC2.
24th June 2020
Millions of people around the world are protesting loud and clear that Black Lives Matter, a campaign that addresses and challenges systemic racism in our contemporary societies. The campaign also draws our attention to historical racism and in particular to figures from history who have profited from systemic racism whose statues have been put on a pedestal. Public art has become a catalyst for social change.
5th March 2020
13th January 2020
Illuminated River, 2019, Leo Villareal, LED installations. London Bridge, Cannon Street Bridge, Southwark Bridge and Millennium Bridge.
12th July 2019
William Pye ‘Cristos’ 1993, bronze, fountain, St. Christopher’s Place, W1.
29th May 2019
Bridget Riley ‘Messengers’ 2019, graphite and acrylic on plaster walls, Annenberg Court, National Gallery, Trafalgar Square,WC2.
25th April 2019
Emma Biggs and Matthew Collings, Mosaic Panels, 2018, London Fruit and Wool Exchange, Brushfield Street, E1.