Exhibitions to see in London this October
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
October 7, 2022

M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Adam Wells
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Exhibitions to see in London this October
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
Exhibitions to see in London this October
To Do
Adam Wells
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Exhibitions to see in London this October
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Exhibitions to see in London this October
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Exhibitions to see in London this October
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Exhibitions to see in London this October
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
Exhibitions to see in London this October
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
Exhibitions to see in London this October
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
Exhibitions to see in London this October
Written by
Adam Wells
Date Published
07/10/2022
Dulwich Picture Gallery
Omer Tiroche Gallery
347 Old Street
London
Ronchini Gallery
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
07/10/2022
To Do
Adam Wells
Exhibitions to see in London this October
Presenting the best art on display in the capital this month
M.K. Čiurlionis, Creation of the World. III from the cycle of 13 paintings, 1905/1906

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds at Dulwich Picture Gallery

Bringing together over 100 paintings and drawings by one of Lithuania’s best-loved artists and composers, Dulwich Picture Gallery’s M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds - developed alongside the Lithuanian Culture Institute - is one of this year’s most exciting London-based art exhibitions. Čiurlionis’ work explores the relationship between humans and the universe in a Calvino-esque blend of reality and mythological symbolism, and many of the pieces on display have been transported to the UK for the first time for this exhibition. Including such masterpieces as Creation of the World (1905/1906), The Zodiac (1906/1907) and Rex (1909), M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds invites visitors to discover “a singular figure in the history of European art whose ethereal, and occasionally fantastical, works were precursors of abstract painting”.

M.K. Čiurlionis: Between Worlds is showing at Dulwich Picture Gallery until 12th March 2023

Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsession-T.W.KEV, 2005

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat at Omer Tiroche Gallery

Opening on 10th October at Omer Tiroche Gallery, Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat explores the concept of repetition in art through the work of thirteen modern and contemporary artists. Taking as its jumping-off point a quote from Andy Warhol describing the work of Giorgio de Chirico, this thematic exhibition features works by such artists as Damien Hirst, Yayoi Kusama, and Warhol himself. In exploring the use of repetition across various artistic movements over 70 years - including Geometric Abstraction, Pop Art and Op Art - the curators of Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat, present the Twentieth Century as the birth of mass-production as a collective cultural understanding following the Industrial Revolution. With this understanding of the power of art, the exhibition tracks the necessary evolution that art has undergone over the course of the last century, and the myriad uses of repetition and multiplicity within the art world.

Eat, Sleep, Paint, Repeat is showing at Omer Tiroche Gallery from 10th October - 23rd December

Glimpses of Art’s logo

Glimpses: We Are What We See at 347 Old Street

The curators of nomadic art agency Glimpses of Art pride themselves on “showcasing artists who disrupt conventions", and their inaugural exhibition - showing from 11th -17th October at Shoreditch’s 347 Old Street - stands as a prime example of this. With a strong emphasis on works by international women and non-binary artists, Glimpses: We Are What We See interrogates the concepts of censorship and identity from a non-normative perspective. The show contains work by over thirty artists, including 3D artists and Gucci collaborator Sasha Katz, the visual artist of The French Dispatch Sandro Kopp and photographer Selina Mayer. Alongside such varying media as drawing, photography, embroidery and sculpture, Glimpses of Art have also collaborated with designer Andres Ros Soto to create an immersive experience utilising lighting, audio-visual interactions and interactive technology to create a four-part sensory journey through its conceptual narrative, described by curators Auronda Scalera and Lidia Ravviso as “an unusual Plato’s cave where the viewer will have the opportunity to be part of [this] mesmerising installation”.

Glimpses: We Are What We See is showing at 347 Old Street from 11th - 17th October

Rebecca Ward, sphinx, 2022

Rebecca Ward: unfolding at Ronchini Gallery

The fourth solo exhibition that Brooklyn-based artist Rebecca Ward has developed with Ronchini Gallery, the all-new works on display here showcase the artist’s love of “blurring the lines between painting and sculpture, fine art and craft, materials and process”. In the creation of these mixed media works - and as an explanation of the title, unfolding - Ward references the slow reveal of abstract information through the artistic process, as well as the changes that her body and life went through in the process of becoming a parent. Ward’s labour-intensive method of painting involved first composing her works digitally, before reworking them by hand onto graph paper with watercolours. Following this, she cuts the canvas before painting the individual pieces and resewing them together to create boldly-coloured works of stunning detail. Naming Agnes Martin and Frank Stella as her chief inspirations in her use of geometry and colour theory, her works provoke different reactions in every viewer, creating a personal experience with each of her paintings.

Rebecca Ward: unfolding is showing at Ronchini Gallery from 12th October - 18th November

Make sure to collect your Yamos on the gowithYamo app with every exhibition you visit!

Thanks for reading
Collect your 5 yamos below
REDEEM YAMOS
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