Each and every Saturday, Fabric hold the biggest party going at one of the biggest and best clubs in the UK. Resident DJs Terry Francis and Craig Richards are huge names in themselves, sought after by...
Wetyourself have shifted over to the biggest, baddest club in town. The mighty Fabric. Each and every Sunday evening, the techno aficionados take over Room One to push the infamous Funktion One rig to...
Absolutely massive line-up for the Exit Festival pre party; Loefah, Boddika, Disclosure... and that's just the beginning. Fresh, forward thinking, rinsing bass.
Duckie's varied shows feature all the classic facets of old-school music-hall entertainment from different performers every week, including burlesque, cabaret, performance art and drag queens.The 'post-...
Lucy Foster and Improbable have devised a staging of the stories of three fierce female pirates, Anne Bonny, Mary Read and Ching Shih.
They take on the notion and the history of going against th...
An exhibition exploring the impact of the outbreak of World War Two in 1939. From the politicans making the decisions to the ordinary people affected by them, this is a fascinating profile of a country...
A fascinating exhibition at the Imperial War Museum that collates the accounts of soldiers who have recently served in the ongoing war in Afghanistan. Made up of letters, emails, blog posts, footage and...
Tate Britain presents Romantics, a display of works by the likes of Constable, Turner and William Blake to be housed in the Clore Galleries, re-opening after a major rehang. Over 170 paintings, prints...
Something of a reception show at Tate Britain this - an exploration of Picasso's critical reception in the UK and his impact on the artists of these shores. With over 150 works by the master himself, this...
Tate
Britain presents an exhibition that explores the idea of migration
through the work of various artists from 1500 to the present day.
Immigration is a bit of a political football right now, but...
A new commission by contemporary artist and film-maker Patrick Keiller that responds to the neo-classical Duveen galleries at Tate Britain. Until 14.10.12.