
JOE HESKETH ‘MONSTER’
GALLERY46 present ‘MONSTER’ a solo show by Joe Hesketh – featuring new and previously unseen works.
GALLERY46 present ‘MONSTER’ a solo show by Joe Hesketh – featuring new and previously unseen works.
NIGHT BY NIGHT A photographic portrait of nightclubbing and night culture from Jason Manning This photographic body of work began… Read More
Artist and musician Gina Birch is among the extraordinary women to come out of England’s original punk movement.
‘Nothing is More Real Than Nothing’ is a collaboration between artist Hanna ten Doornkaat and writer Daniel James. The reclusive… Read More
A group show of international artists with KUNST the CLOWN Curated by PAUL SAKOILSKY & Martin J Tickner DREAD AND… Read More
Set within two Georgian houses in Whitechapel’s Ashfield Street, Gallery 46 is the perfect location for Daniel David Freeman’s latest solo… Read More
In this expansive exhibition, Daniel David Freeman magnifies his approach to collage and embellishment through studious exploration into the prophetic world of biomech.
Change is the constant that ripples through the work of Zina Karaman and Xanthe Soning and the title of this ‘in memoriam’ show, dedicated to the two artists’ friend Armando Zamparini who tragically passed away earlier this year
Paint Talk & GALLERY46 present ‘Knocking It Out Of The Park’, a group show of work by 8 international artists Joshua… Read More
The exhibition, featuring the work of 38 international artists, explores the intent to generate new relations between objects and their associations with the world around them. The works include ceramics, sculptures, installations, drawings, paintings, performance and more.
The first swing of the bat pulls together a broad collection of language and conceptual framework, each artist bringing a distinct language to the show.
While other galleries show dusty re-runs from those long-gone ambassadors of the ’60s, GALLERY46 presents five contemporary artists who are very much alive, kicking and working in POP…NOW!
Exhibition and book launch at GALLERY46, documenting life within a circle of independent young Londoners; gifted in music, the arts and the illicit. It’s contents are the visual culmination of a lifestyle; photographed over 5 years, which developed into a long-term project as Matt’s experience and interest in photography grew parallel.
THIS SPACE I BELONG presents the contemporary documentary works of fifteen emerging artists. Informed by the collective need to feel a sense of belonging in our surroundings, the exhibition explores notions of conflicting identity, community, our environments and change, investigat- ing current cultural and socioeconomic issues.
LIMINALITY with GALLERY46 present a series of new works dealing with the themes of incubation / self isolation / modes of liminality / meditation / restrictions and freedoms.
In a mode of LIMINALITY – we are compelled to ask questions. To mediate on how we will transverse and embrace the mystery and power of transition.
Two contemporary European galleries, Gallery 46 and the Lebenson Gallery Paris, will engage in an exchange of curatorial culture and present two exhibitions, ‘SMOKE’ and ‘STRENGTH’.
The Top 7 Art Exhibitions to see in London include: Plants, women, colour, abortions, human organs, cities and wood.
The Top 7 Art Exhibitions to see in London this summer include: Refugees, shoes, a block of meat, a birthing pool, Ancient civilisations, rare prints and mescaline.
We Sing the Body Electric is an all-female, multimedia exhibition at East London’s Gallery 46, curated by Camilla Cole and featuring: Juliette Mahieux Bartoli, Ingrid Berthmoine, Stine Deja, Enam Gbewonyo, Bex Ilsley , Laila Majid, Stacie McCormick, Alix Marie, Marie Munk, Fern O’ Carolan, Katarzyna Perlak, Cherelle Sappleton, Karolina Stellaki and Rebecca Wallis.
Renowned fashion photographer David Hughes and iconic artist and illustrator Paul Davis have embarked on a collaboration of photography, painting and everyday objects
This weeks Top 7 Art Exhibitions to see in London include Pleasurable painting, Anglo-Saxons, automotive masculinity, the Arctic ocean, planes, and a spiky chair.
More than seven years in the making, Epoh Beech’s hand-drawn animation sits at the heart of the exhibition. Inspired by Joseph Conrad’s novella, Heart of Darkness, and Ben Jonson’s Jacobean play ‘The Masque of Blackness’
This will be present Jung sang sub’s first UK solo show featuring new works that deal with South Korean society and structure – intricate, mesmeric and delicate, at once political and playful.
LIMINALITY [CACOPHONY] a series of music and performance events curated by Sean Mclusky, Kevin Quigley, Bjørn Hatleskog plus guest curator Johny Brown