An exhibition of John Kenny's wonderful photography this July at Capital Culture.
Kenny visits remote African tribes - for this show, across Ethiopia and Namibia - and photographs the people he sees there.
Without flash or studio equipment Kenny's images are startling. They grab your attention immediately with their simple clarity whilst the intricate detail and personalities of these people holds your gaze for hours.
Hailed as the best opera yet designed and directed by David McVicar, this stunning four hour version of Strauss's Viennese fantasy makes a return to the Coliseum. Several of the cast from the original...
This Noël Coward is set in a country house by the Thames where four guests arrive. They may expect a civilised weekend of polite chat and illicit love affairs, but what they get is a family of bohemians...
Once upon a time the Fab Four were the not quite so fab five, a band that was struggling along and performing rock'n'roll covers in seedy clubs.This new show, making its West End premiere after a run ...
All singing, high kicking fun is the order of the day in this sexy, sleazy musical set in prohibition era Chicago, and following a showgirl named Roxie Hart as she tries to clear her name of a murder she...
An exhibition of works by photographer Peter DiCampo at the Strand Gallery this February. The image son show document life without electrivity in Northern Ghana. Until 12.02.12.
An exhibition showcasing the best of contemporary photographic talent at the National Portrait Gallery right now. On display are the prize-winners from the 2011 Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize...
After his death in 2011 comes the National Portrait Gallery's survey of the portraits of Lucian Freud - one of Britain's best loved artists. Freud is one of the major names in post-war British art. His...
Sometimes credited as the creator of the first work of Pop Art, Richard Hamilton is one of the leading figures of British art in the Twentieth Century. Working mainly with painting and collage, Hamilton's...