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Featured Events in London in September 2025 (December Updated)

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Space: Could Life Exist Beyond Earth? | Natural History Museum

Space: Could Life Exist Beyond Earth? | Natural History Museum

May 16, 2025–Feb 22, 2026 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
Touch a piece of Mars, wrap your hands around a fragment of the Moon and snap a selfie with the Allende meteorite, which – at 4.567 billion years old – is even older than Earth! Today, there’s more evidence than ever before to suggest that life could exist beyond Earth. Our newest exhibition explores the big question – are we alone in the universe? Travel from Earth’s extreme environments out into space, stopping off at asteroids, Mars, the icy moons of Jupiter and Saturn and planets beyond our solar system in the search for life. Smell planets, touch parts of our solar system, design your own space mission and see what scientists believe could be out there in our out-of-this-world exhibition.
Radical Harmony: Helene Kröller-Müller's Neo-Impressionists | The National Gallery

Radical Harmony: Helene Kröller-Müller's Neo-Impressionists | The National Gallery

Sep 13, 2025–Feb 8, 2026 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
When critics first saw Georges Seurat’s new style of painting, they thought it might bring about the death of painting itself. But what was it about artists like Paul Signac, Anna Boch, Jan Toorop and Henri-Edmond Cross, that ruffled so many feathers? Neo-Impressionists painted in small dots of pure colour. Viewed from a distance, the colours blend to create nuanced tones and an illusion of light. Now known as pointillism, this technique simplified form and played with colour in an entirely new way, verging on the edge of abstraction. Alongside this exciting approach to colour, their style went hand-in-hand with radical political ideas. They captured late 19th-century European society through luminous landscapes, portraits and interior scenes, while also depicting the struggles faced by the working class, in reaction against the industrial age. Most of the paintings we’re exhibiting were collected by Helene Kröller-Müller, one of the first great women art patrons of the 20th century. She assembled the most comprehensive ensemble of Neo-Impressionist paintings in the world. Collected with the aim of being publicly accessible, these works now form part of the Kröller-Müller Museum in the Netherlands, which Helene Kröller-Muller founded. See these radical visions of pure colour for yourself in Radical Harmony: Helene Kröller-Müller’s Neo-Impressionists. This exhibition is a collaboration between the National Gallery and the Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo
Watch this (VR) Space | London

Watch this (VR) Space | London

May 14, 2020–Dec 31, 2030 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
A Virtual Reality Art Exhibition that you can view in any location and on any device. Please see the above picture instructions for how you can view it on a tablet/mobile. You can view the exhibition with or without a virtual reality headset. Copy this link to view the Virtual Reality Art Exhibition on a computer/laptop: https://edu.cospaces.io/PMB-KAV The Virtual Private View of the Exhibition was held on Thursday 14th of May 2020 at 8:15pm on Zoom (Virtual drinks provided.)
Teresa Margolles: Mil Veces un Instante (A thousand times in an Instant) | The Fourth Plinth

Teresa Margolles: Mil Veces un Instante (A thousand times in an Instant) | The Fourth Plinth

Sep 18, 2024–Jan 31, 2026 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
The latest Fourth Plinth commission 'Mil Veces un Instante (A Thousand Times in an Instant)’ by Mexican artist Teresa Margolles was unveiled on Wednesday 18.09.2024. The monolithic sculpture was made with plaster cast molds of the faces of 726 transgender people from Mexico and the UK. The molds were made by applying plaster directly onto each individual’s face. The resulting object is both a visual record of their respective features and, imbued with hair and skin cells, a material infusion of their physicality.
Barber Institute of Fine Arts Collection Exhibition | Somerset House

Barber Institute of Fine Arts Collection Exhibition | Somerset House

May 23, 2025–Feb 22, 2026 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
The Barber Institute of Art was founded in 1939 as an art gallery affiliated with the University of Birmingham in the UK. It aims to promote aesthetic education on campus and in society. Its collections include paintings, drawings, prints, coins, sculptures, decorative arts, etc. The Courtauld Art Gallery will exhibit some of its important collections during the Barber Institute of Art's closure for renovation from 2025 to 2026. The artists involved include Dutch Golden Age portrait painter Frans Hals, French portrait painter Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, British Pre-Raphaelite painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti, French Post-Impressionist painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, etc. Some paintings will be displayed in the permanent exhibition hall of the Courtauld Art Gallery, leading the audience to discover the correlation between the collections of the two institutions.
Design and Disability | Victoria and Albert Museum

Design and Disability | Victoria and Albert Museum

Jun 7, 2025–Feb 15, 2026 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
Both a celebration and a call to action, Design and Disability showcases the radical contributions of Disabled, Deaf, and neurodivergent people and communities to design history and contemporary culture, from the 1940s to now.
Feeling Blue, Alberta Whittle | Greenwich

Feeling Blue, Alberta Whittle | Greenwich

Oct 5, 2023–Dec 31, 2030 (UTC)
Greenwich
Exhibitions
The artwork is displayed on powder-coated steel gates, designed by Whittle and made at Glasgow Sculpture Studios. It was unveiled on 5 October 2023 at the Queen’s House in Greenwich. Feeling Blue has been developed in response to RMG’s large and varied collections, as well as the history and cultural significance of Greenwich. The 160 x 155 cm tapestry is filled with richly evocative textures, symbolic shapes, and tropical colours. It was woven by hand over a period of six months by Naomi Robertson and Elaine Wilson at Dovecot Studios. They used a variety of techniques, yarns, and over 150 colour mixes to add variety and depth to the surface of the tapestry. Dominating the tapestry is the phrase ‘feeling blue’ which stands out from a background of blues and greens, the combination of different shades resembling water in motion. Blue is immediately associated with oceans and seas but there are also more emotive connotations which Whittle chose to explore. The colour blue, and in particular the term ‘feeling blue’, is used to describe sadness or depression. While the exact origin of the term is uncertain it has been suggested that it comes from the tradition of ships flying blue flags and officers bearing a painted blue band when a captain or officer died. For others, blue symbolises tranquillity. In the Queen’s House the colour blue is used throughout for decoration, notably the balustrade of the Tulip Stairs. Drawing on her research of the British naval uniform, Whittle also reflects on the legacies of British colonialism. From the mid-eighteenth-century, the Royal Navy introduced a uniform for officers made from a deep blue fabric. The colour was achieved using a dye from the indigo plant that was native to India. Until the end of the eighteenth century the indigo plant was grown, harvested and processed by enslaved people on North American plantations. Indentured labourers in India and modern-day Bangladesh also produced indigo for the East India Company. Today, Navy blue endures as a colour of authority from police to military officers, though the history of the colour and connection to colonialism is little known. Whittle continues her exploration of maritime worlds by the inclusion of coloured ropes – reminiscent of those used on ships. For Whittle, rope is a symbol of both hope and oppression. Ropes are associated with bondage, imprisonment and even execution but are equally symbolic of lifelines for people in distress. Whittle’s ongoing engagement with the climate crisis is found in the decorative coral that frames the tapestry. The delicate pastel pinks and vibrant yellows evoke the beauty of tropical oceans and are a reminder of the importance of reefs. Decorative cultured freshwater pearl beads have also been stitched onto the tapestry. As well as representing an oceanic realm, Whittle connects Feeling Blue with two sixteenth-century paintings the Armada Portrait and Sir Francis Drake which will be displayed alongside the tapestry. In both portraits, pearls are used as a symbol of wealth, some of which was derived from colonial trade and exploitation. The tapestry is hung on a set of blue ‘gates’, which are an important component of Whittle’s work. Whittle sees the ‘gates’ as reminiscent of fencing, suggesting containment and control. Placed within the gallery space the gates no longer act as a barrier. Instead, Whittle uses the gates to expand rather than restrict as visitors are free to walk around them and view the tapestry from both sides. The decorative fretwork on the panels evokes the architecture of the Queen’s House, in particular the Tulip Stairs. Alberta Whittle, said: “The commission has been a wonderful opportunity to think deeply about maritime histories and consider the powers in place that decide how these histories are portrayed. This new tapestry is a chance to explore these ideas of power alongside the rhythms of the ocean and its vulnerability under climate colonialism. The commission has also provided me with the opportunity to continue to work with Naomi Robertson and Elaine Wilson at Dovecot Studios and the rest of the fantastic weaving team.” Celia Joicey, Director of Dovecot Studios, said: "This commission represents the contemporary significance of tapestry as a collective medium. Started in the midst of the 2021 lockdown, it is testimony to a group of people responding creatively and collaboratively to the Museum collections. Feeling Blue embodies the passion, focus and skill of Dovecot’s weavers, Alberta Whittle’s endlessly interesting ideas and the care and enterprise of the commissioning team." Katherine Gazzard, Curator of Art, Royal Museums Greenwich, said: “At Royal Museums Greenwich, we are committed to working with contemporary artists whose practice engages with our historic sites and collections, as well as with the present challenges facing our communities and our planet. The opportunity to commission a contemporary tapestry from Alberta Whittle and Dovecot Studios spoke powerfully to this ethos. The finished tapestry will go on public display in the Queen’s House, our flagship art gallery. When the Queen’s House was built in the early 17th century, it was at the cutting edge of art and design. Commissions like Feeling Blue help us to honour that legacy, ensuring that, four centuries after the building’s completion, the Queen’s House continues to showcase artistic innovations and new perspectives.” ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Feeling Blue Alberta Whittle Tapestry by Dovecot Studios 2023, cotton, linen, synthetic yarn, cultured freshwater pearl beads Tapestry woven for Dovecot by Naomi Robertson, Master Weaver, and Elaine Wilson Displayed on powder coated steel gates made by Glasgow Sculpture Studios Purchased with assistance from the Contemporary Art Society
Future of Food | Science Museum

Future of Food | Science Museum

Jul 24, 2025–Sep 1, 2026 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
How does our food today go from field to plate? How did food use to be produced in the past? And how will major advances in ecology and biotechnology change food in the future? Discover the answers to these and many more vital questions in an exciting new exhibition exploring how science is creating more sustainable ways of growing, making, cooking and eating food. From food production way back in ancient history to our industrialised systems of today, thought-provoking objects, hands-on interactive exhibits and compelling digital experiences will show us how we got here—and where we’re going.
Abbas Zahedi: Begin Again | Tate Modern

Abbas Zahedi: Begin Again | Tate Modern

Jan 29, 2025–Jan 4, 2026 (UTC)
London
Exhibitions
On the first Saturday of each month Abbas Zahedi hosts a support group for the collective processing of ecological grief. In collaboration with thinkers, artists and musicians, participants are invited to consider ‘How can we make sense of a world increasingly shaped by loss and disconnection?’. The discussions take place in a new commission entitled Begin Again. As part of the installation, instruments and playback devices have been plugged into Tate Modern’s utility pipes and deeper architecture. The sound composition shifts between moments of harmony and disintegration. Each sonic collapse prompts the piece to rebuild, emphasising the power of renewal and beginning again. The commission creates a space for collective listening where participants can reflect on how to protect and restore ecological connectivity.
Pirates | National Maritime Museum

Pirates | National Maritime Museum

Mar 29, 2025–Jan 20, 2026 (UTC)
Greenwich
Exhibitions
AboutThe exhibition explores piracy in popular culture, from comical figures like Captain Pugwash to anti-heroes like Jack Sparrow, and examines its lasting fascination. Beyond their swashbuckling image, the real history of pirates is complex. Pirates traces piracy worldwide, from the South China Sea to North Africa, and highlights modern piracy issues. It showcases real figures like Blackbeard, William Kidd, Anne Bonny, and Mary Read, revealing how perceptions of pirates, past and present, continue to evolve.
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Tomorrowland Thailand 2026 | Chon Buri

Tomorrowland Thailand 2026 | Chon Buri

Dec 1–Dec 31, 2026 (UTC+7)
Thailand
Singapore Airshow 2026 | Changi Exhibition Centre

Singapore Airshow 2026 | Changi Exhibition Centre

Feb 3–Feb 8, 2026 (UTC-5)
Singapore
TWICE <THIS IS FOR> WORLD TOUR IN TAIPEI | Taipei Dome

TWICE <THIS IS FOR> WORLD TOUR IN TAIPEI | Taipei Dome

Mar 21, 2026 (UTC+8)
Taipei
Usher Atlanta Concert Tour 2026|August 13 | StateFarmArena

Usher Atlanta Concert Tour 2026|August 13 | StateFarmArena

Aug 13, 2026 (UTC-5)
Atlanta
Standard Chartered Hong Kong Marathon 2026 | Hong Kong

Standard Chartered Hong Kong Marathon 2026 | Hong Kong

Jan 18, 2026 (UTC+8)
Hong Kong

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