
12 Exhibitions to see in early 2023
12 contemporary art exhibitions you have to see in early 2023 all are in London except where stated.
12 contemporary art exhibitions you have to see in early 2023 all are in London except where stated.
For Van Hanos’ first exhibition in London, the Marfa-based artist presents a series of new paintings, focusing exclusively, for the… Read More
This Fall, Lisson Gallery opens its first permanent gallery in Los Angeles, within the cultural hub of Hollywood’s Sycamore District…. Read More
Lisson Gallery now represent Cheyney Thompson in New York, in collaboration with Andrew Kreps Gallery. The galleries will present a dual-part exhibition… Read More
Six shows to see in the heart of the West End, from sculpture to photography.
Jonathan Monk’s investigations into memory, ephemera and artistic process emerge from his practice as an inveterate observer, participant and collector of both popular culture and conceptual art.
Lisson Gallery has announced exclusive worldwide representation of American artist and filmmaker Garrett Bradley. Bradley works across narrative, documentary and experimental modes of filmmaking to address themes such as race, class, familial relationships, social justice and cultural histories in the United States.
Lisson Gallery has launched a new space on Cork Street with an exhibition titled Horizon, the gallery will be at the heart of London’s Frieze activity.
Cork Street Galleries has announced that Sadie Coles HQ, Lisson Gallery, Frieze Live and Stephen Friedman will take over gallery spaces on Cork Street and Old Burlington Street launching during Frieze week 2020. They will join Cork Street’s permanent roster of galleries to become the epicentre of cultural activity during London’s busiest art market month
Ryan Gander will open Lisson Gallery’s new space in New York with an exhibition highlighting time as the new currency, reflecting on how – in an age of identity politics, selfie culture and an incessant need to shout the loudest – the focus of our time should be on the value of time itself.
Money, as ever, is the root of this inequality. Just like a great portion of London’s upper middle classes have escaped to their country homes, the majority of mega-dealers have moved their operations online.
Lisson Gallery have announced a new partnership with Augment, an app whose proprietary technology allow you to visualise 3D objects and products in augmented reality through your smartphones or tablet in your own space.
Lisson Gallery are supplementing Art Basel virtual Rooms by inviting key Asian galleries to join together in a virtual walk-through, to help make the site interactive and appealing to audiences both regionally and globally.
Lisson Gallery present an exhibition of recent paintings and works on paper by New York based abstract painter Joanna Pousette-Dart.
The Top 5 Art Exhibitions to see in London include A 50th anniversary, dating and reframing history.
The Top 7 art exhibitions in London include Robots, street calligraphy, a hot wall, hands, layers and balls.
This week’s Top 7 Art shows to see in London include Gypsy hunting, a fallen star, animal traps, a lost city, mental health, Christmas and a toupe.
For his tenth exhibition with Lisson Gallery, Dan Graham draws on his long-standing history working with music and performance to present a new stage-set design, alongside over-sized models, video and a courtyard pavilion, exploring the relationship between audience and performer.
This week I gave my undivided attention to Art Night, because who wouldn’t?
Immortality, a maze, decapitated bodies, raw emotion, optical illusions, tar and Iran.
A large new floor-based stone circle, Flint Wheel (2018) is at the centre of Richard Long’s latest exhibition in London, ‘Circle to Circle, which is loosely themed around different uses of the circular motif across his practice.
We managed to catch up with Alex Logsdail in New York during Armory week to talk Lisson in New York, Lisson 10th Avenue being one already and whats coming up in their 51st year..
Ryan Gander’s sixth exhibition with Lisson Gallery draws on notions of time and its passage. With a philosophical overture and a sharp existential focus, the exhibition illustrates the innate ability of all things, in both physics and the wider human context, to naturally self-right themselves.
Lisson Gallery now represents the estate of the Italian painter Antonio Calderara and are showing some of his work now at 67 Lisson Street