At the National Gallery in London, a solo exhibition retraces the work of Joseph Wright of Derby, focusing on his series of candlelight paintings created between 1765 and 1773. The selected works reveal a tension-filled painting style, where artificial light is not merely a scenic effect but a philosophical lens. Wright does not simply celebrate scientific discoveries; he stages the moral ambiguity of observation, the solitude of the gaze, the complex relationship between knowledge and spectacle. The paintings present emblematic moments of shared learning. In Three Persons Viewing the Gladiator by Candlelight, an artist submits his drawing for critical assessment. In The Orrery, a philosopher uses a mechanical model to explain the solar system, with an oil lamp replacing the sun. In The Air Pump, the reaction of a family to a scientific demonstration ranges from wonder to doubt and fear. Light becomes a dramatic device to explore themes such as death, melancholy and scepticism. The exhibition offers a critical re-evaluation of an artist often associated with the rational optimism of the Enlightenment. His style, strongly influenced by Caravaggio’s chiaroscuro, stands out in the British art scene of the 18th century, which at the time largely avoided such expressive contrasts. Alongside the paintings are drawings, objects and mezzotint prints, which also document the international circulation of his work through the reproduction techniques of the period.
Opening in April at Buckingham Palace, Queen Elizabeth II: Her Life in Style traces more than seventy years of reign through garments and accessories from the Royal Collection. The exhibition examines the Queen’s style as a political language, a tool of representation and a form of visual diplomacy.
A major retrospective revisits the artistic and personal partnership between two central figures of the Bloomsbury Group, restoring their work to a decisive place within British modernism.
A major retrospective at Tate Modern traces more than six decades of Julio Le Parc’s work, exploring light, movement and the active participation of the viewer.
The London exhibition devoted to Diane Arbus focuses on the intimate, domestic settings where the American photographer created some of her most compelling portraits. It reveals the power of a gaze that confronts the viewer without compromise, bringing to light the complexity of lives often overlooked.