
The Top 5 Art Exhibitions to see in June in London
13 June 2025 • Tabish Khan
A giant tea bag, blue masks, the art market circus, the history of abstract painting and woven heads.
13 June 2025 • Tabish Khan
A giant tea bag, blue masks, the art market circus, the history of abstract painting and woven heads.
27 March 2025 • Phillip Edward Spradley
Alejandra Moros work explores the intimate, often overlooked moments that shape our understanding of connection, identity, and vulnerability.
20 October 2023 • Chard Adio
Born in the Dominican Republic and currently based in Philadelphia, US. Raelis Vasquez is a figurative artist. With a BA… Read More
27 May 2023 • Tabish Khan
Lasers, sculpture, bargains, sci-fi and meditation.
12 March 2023 • Tabish Khan
A year on the South Coast, AI, vibrant colours, obituaries, fibre and glass.
18 May 2021 • Mark Westall
10’ is an examination of the ways in which the body is understood in a transformative period in history, where the future is both de ned and mysterious, the past distant and obscure, and how it relates to the psyche in increasingly complex ways.
24 November 2020 • Mark Westall
In early spring, in an attempt to understand the effects of the pandemic from the perspective of the expressive mind, PM/AM initiated a discussion between a group of artists, opening up an exchange that brought a number of topics into the unique frame of pandemic life–the art world, productivity, politics, society, psychology, media, technology, domestic life.
30 April 2020 • Mark Westall
PM/AM are giving you an opportunity to catch up with Brooklyn based artist Anthony Miler during his residency in London.
14 December 2016 • Paul Carey-Kent
Most evenings the London art scene can yield plenty of variety, but a recent Thursday provided a particularly enjoyable set of contrasts, so much so that I ran late…
15 October 2015 • Eric Thorp
The ever growing influence of digitised imagery in painting is beckoning in a new era of abstraction.
30 June 2015 • Eric Thorp
In 1995 a group of Atlanta rappers called Goodie Mobb imortalised the phrase ‘DIRTY SOUTH’ – a term used to describe an evolution in Southern American ‘street culture’ that would captivate a young America and become one of the most significant and lucrative movements in the history of American popular culture.