Victoria Miro Wharf Road
Victoria Miro Wharf Road

Victoria Miro

  • Art | Galleries
  • Islington
  • Recommended
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Time Out says

A visit to this ex-Victorian furniture factory rarely disappoints. Victoria Miro first opened her gallery in Mayfair's Cork Street in 1985. It quickly became known for showcasing the work of established and emerging artists from the USA, Europe and Asia, and as a breeding ground for exciting new British talent. In 2000 Victoria Miro Gallery relocated to this expansive 8,000 sq ft space located right on the border between Hoxton and Islington. The exhibition space spans two floors and the gallery is almost unique in London for having its own landscaped garden, overlooking Regent's Canal, which has been used for installations by artists such as Yayoi Kusama. Among the glittering clutch of artists it represents are Turner Prize winners Grayson Perry and Chris Ofili. You’ll also know this cavernous Old Street gallery as the place everyone queues around the block to get into whenever it puts on a Yayoi Kusama show. But there’s more to this beautiful space than dotty pumpkins and infinity mirrors. 

Details

Address
16 Wharf Rd
London
N1 7RW
Transport:
Tube: Angel
Opening hours:
Tue-Sat 10am-6pm
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What’s on

Chantal Joffe: I Remember

As anyone who has seen her everyday figures lining Whitechapel’s Elizabeth Line platform will know, Chantal Joffe pays attention. Though her paintings are cartoonish and sometimes distorted, she faithfully renders the intricacies of expression. A sidelong glance, a furrowed brow, the specific placement of a hand: it’s in these easy-to-miss details that her sensitive portraits come to life. This exhibition at Victoria Miro will focus on a new body of paintings of friends and fellow artists, made in London and Venice. 
  • Painting

The Stories We Tell

Victoria Miro will present the works of three young emerging artists in The Stories We Tell. Through their paintings, Tidawhitney Lek, Emil Sands and Khalif Tahir Thompson, explore memory, identity, family and the body. Lek draws on experiences growing up as a first generation American, born to immigrant parents. Sands paints the human body on large canvases, often in expansive landscapes. Often using family photographs for inspiration, Thompson builds on cultural references and their connection to the modern world. 
  • Painting
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