Change and tradition. London never ceases to amaze. Capital of the revolutions of customs, fashion and music, Britain’s megalopolis has always guarded its icons well. Carnaby Street is one of those places with its very roots in legend. The stomping grounds of the mods and their scooters at the end of the ‘50s, the pulsing heart of Swinging London as depicted on the cover of Time Magazine in 1966 and then the skinheads, punks and new romantics, all the way up to the modern tribes of street style - for more than sixty years, this street has been the epicentre of the culture and lifestyle of London’s West End. In the heart of Soho, just a few steps from Oxford Street and Regent Street, Carnaby has changed its face a thousand times through the years. While the mini-skirt of Mary Quant is no longer a scandal and the window displays of Marion Foale and Sally Tuffin have been replaced by the boutiques of international brands, you can still feel the vibe of when the Who and The Rolling Stones played in the neighbourhood’s underground clubs. Of course, Carnaby is less alternative than it once was, but it’s no coincidence that a new ecological revolution has begun here under the guidance of the heirs of the Stones. Georgia and James Jagger, along with Ty Wood and other VIP millennials like Pixie Geldof, Rita Ora and Poppy Delevigne are promoting the Blue Turtle Trail on Carnaby Street, the social campaign to eliminate single-use plastics in the city and promote eco-sustainable fishing products in London’s restaurants and bars.
Marking the 250th anniversary of their births, a landmark exhibition explores the intertwined lives and legacies of Turner and Constable, two of the most important 19th-century British landscape painters.
An exhibition to tell the story of Pictorialism: the first international movement of artistic photography, which developed throughout the world from 1880 to 1960.
The exhibition begins in the 1920s, when swimsuits began to be marketed for swimming and when seaside holidays became popular and explores the role of swimming in modern life up to the present day.