Art

London art exhibitions, fairs, galleries and artists

George Bellows  Stag at Sharkey's, 1909. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Hinman B. Hurlbut Collection. © The Cleveland Museum of Art

Art Review: George Bellows @ Royal Academy

Plenty of bloodlust in paintings of boxing and war

Natalie Meyjes, Baby Yaga. Image courtesy Long & Ryle.

Art Review: Fairytale @ Long & Ryle

Dioramas of taxidermied animals and an insect boxing match in this free exhibition.

Thomas Shotter's view of Piccadilly, 1842. ©The Trustees of the British Museum.

Never Published Images Of London Feature In New Book From The British Museum

70 historic views of the capital you’ve probably never seen before.

Milo,  © Martin Usborne

Art Preview: The Silence Of Dogs In Cars @ Little Black Gallery

Photographs of dogs abandoned in cars will tug on the heart strings.

nucleardawn

Help Save The Brixton Nuclear Dawn Mural

An upcoming development could obscure the local landmark.

Hee-ohks-te-kin, Rabbits Skin Leggings, a Brave Nez Percé, by George Catlin, 1832. Copyright: Smithsonian American Art Museum

Art Review: George Catlin @ National Portrait Gallery

Moving portraits of American Indians in this free exhibition.

Adam Dant. Image courtesy Eleven Spitalfields Gallery.

Art Preview: Soerditch @ Eleven Spitalfields

Satirical drawings of Shoreditch in a free exhibition.

Arsenal

Going Underground: Ross Ashmore Paints Every Tube Station

An epic project coincidentally coming to fruition in the Tube 150 anniversary year.

Underground 2013 by Tony Harrison.

Londonist Underground Exhibition Opens At The Bishopsgate Institute

10 works of art showing subterranean London, as depicted by Londonist readers.

Richard_T_Walker_at_Carroll_Fletcher_Gallery

Richard T Walker: In Defiance Of Being Here, At Carroll/Fletcher Gallery

A heady mix of sound, video, art and live performance

Federico Barocci (1535-1612) Head study for Saint John the Evangelist National Gallery of Art, Washington Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund 1979 Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund, Image courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington

Art Review: Barocci – Brilliance and Grace @ National Gallery

Have they discovered another Renaissance master?