Programme: Sat - Thu 10 am - 5 pm | Fri 10 am - 8.30 pm
Tickets: £ 18
Location: British Museum
Adresse: Great Russell St, London WC1B 3DG
Curated by Jessica Harrison-Hall and produced with the collaboration of over 100 scholars from 14 countries, the exhibition China's Hidden Century at the British Museum, is an interesting opportunity to explore one of the most important and turbulent periods in Chinese history. The exhibition presents a wide range of art objects, photographs and historical documents that take us on a journey through the period between the end of the Qing Empire in 1911 and the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949. Rather than following a conventional timeline, China's Hidden Century explores the themes and issues that span this transitional historical period making it very accessible and engaging for visitors, regardless of their level of knowledge of Chinese history. Magnificent sculptures in wood and bronze, antique porcelain and fine fabrics are among the artworks on display. A rich selection of photographs - such as those taken by Henri Cartier-Bresson during his trip to China in the 1940s - document the daily life of the Chinese during the civil war period. Another original experience is the reconstruction of a typical 1930s Chinese house, made of wood, offering visitors the opportunity to enter and explore its interiors, with furniture of the period and everyday objects.
The Royal Academy in London presents a major retrospective devoted to Michaelina Wautier, a seventeenth-century Flemish painter long overlooked by art history. Portraits, mythological scenes and allegories reveal an artist working with full independence across genres.
V&A East opens with an exhibition exploring 125 years of Black music in Britain. From jazz to grime, the show traces genres, scenes and generations. Music emerges as a driving force in shaping British cultural identity.
Triple Trouble at Newport Street Gallery stages a collision between Shepard Fairey, Damien Hirst and Invader. The exhibition treats collaboration as a field of friction, exposing tensions and sharp contrasts between three visual languages that do not seek harmony but a direct, uncompromising encounter.