Triple Trouble at Newport Street Gallery is not a prestige operation built around three big names. It is an experiment on the very nature of artistic collaboration, played on the edge of conflict rather than convergence. Shepard Fairey, Damien Hirst and Invader come from three distinct territories, with visual languages known for their ability to saturate space and dominate the eye. Their encounter does not aim for fusion. It generates friction, and the exhibition never tries to smooth it out. That friction is precisely what gives the project its charge. The installation, spread across the gallery’s six spaces, unfolds like a sequence of controlled collisions. There is no linear narrative and no pedagogical intent. Instead, the viewer moves through a succession of clashes: the clinical coolness of Hirst’s seriality next to Fairey’s militant geometries; Invader’s pixel mosaics disrupting images that belong to entirely different contexts. Each artist’s signature remains unmistakable, yet every work feels subjected to a new kind of pressure, as though testing how much their style can withstand the impact of the others. What emerges is not a synthesis and certainly not a shared aesthetic. Rather, the exhibition makes visible the mental architectures that drive each artist’s practice. Fairey operates in the realm of symbols and visual propaganda, built on repetition as a political tool. Hirst treats seriality as a philosophical system, playing on the tension between attraction and repulsion, formal purity and obsession. Invader brings the logic of the game, the urban treasure hunt, the infinite reproduction of a digital code. Seeing them together means observing three ways of producing contemporary imagery pushed into direct relation. The exhibition works because it refuses to tame this dissonance. The collaborative works are not celebrations of unity but stress tests. Hirst’s spinning technique clashes with Fairey’s programmatic graphics, while Invader’s pixel interventions fracture the order of cabinets and panels. The overall effect is that of an open laboratory, where the aim is not perfection but the registration of process, tension and risk. There is no complacency, no attempt to reassure viewers with familiar formulas. Triple Trouble positions itself within a broader reflection on the meeting point between pop visual culture, street art and the institutional space of a gallery. But it does so without reducing the encounter to a simple sum of aesthetics. It asks the viewer to accept imperfection, friction and short circuits. Above all, it shows how three artists, each accustomed to occupying space in a totalising way, can meet not to harmonise but to push into each other’s territory. In this sense, the exhibition functions less as a showcase and more as an experiment in forced coexistence, producing something rare - a dialogue that does not seek approval, only inquiry.
Last Days returns to the Linbury Theatre with an intensely intimate reinterpretation of the final days of an artist inspired by Kurt Cobain. Matt Copson and Oliver Leith avoid biographical narrative in favour of a study of silence, obsession and disorientation, turning the stage into a suspended psychological landscape.
The Royal Academy presents the most extensive UK retrospective of Rose Wylie, showcasing her free and unmistakable approach to painting. Iconic works and new pieces trace a career that gained late recognition but now stands at the forefront. A renewed reading of her visual energy, shaped by memory, pop culture and a deliberate spontaneity.
Ichiko Aoba brings her ethereal music to London’s Royal Albert Hall. With her new album Luminescent Creatures, the Japanese singer-songwriter turns the stage into a dreamlike landscape where silences and melodies unfold as inner journeys.
The National Gallery presents a major retrospective exploring Renoir’s many visions of love. More than fifty works, including Bal au Moulin de la Galette, will come to London in Autumn 2026. The exhibition traces fin-de-siècle Paris through the artist’s vivid social and emotional landscapes.