The exhibition Diane Arbus: Sanctum Sanctorum at David Zwirner in London brings together around forty-five photographs taken between 1961 and 1971 in bedrooms, hotel rooms, trailers and private apartments. Although the selection is compact, it clearly reveals the trajectory of Arbus’s gaze, which moves through intimacy and the margins of society with a clarity that still feels striking today. Arbus is known for her attention to subjects traditionally ignored or treated with distance by mainstream photography. Nudists, cross-dressers, young girls, blind couples, socialites, itinerant performers. In this London exhibition a fundamental aspect of her work emerges with particular strength. The subject is not simply portrayed but participates in a visual exchange built on trust and reciprocity. The title Sanctum Sanctorum, which evokes a sacred inner chamber, captures this tension. Private space becomes both refuge and stage, a protected environment and at the same time a place where something is revealed. The exhibition focuses on moments of ordinary life that become unexpectedly charged. Arbus does not remove context but incorporates it: a cluttered sink, an open refrigerator, everyday objects that lend the scene a truth free of embellishment. Some images are uneasy to look at and this is part of their power. They invite reflection on what lies outside conventional vision, on what does not seek approval. Critics have often highlighted this raw and uncompromising quality in her work. Another dimension the exhibition brings into focus is the relationship between photographer and subject. Arbus’s images do not feel like intrusions but like encounters. Many of her portraits seem built on an unspoken pact, on the willingness of her subjects to be seen for what they are without filters or strategies of seduction. Her decision to keep the edges of the negative and avoid intervention on the image reinforces this sense of authenticity. The exhibition is not simply celebratory. It is also an invitation to question the role of photography today, in an era when images are overproduced and the representation of the other risks becoming a form of consumption. Arbus’s work demands time and attention. It does not seek consensus, does not facilitate easy identification, does not soften complexity. It shows what we often overlook or prefer not to see. Sanctum Sanctorum thus becomes an opportunity to reconsider Arbus beyond her most iconic works, focusing instead on a territory that runs through much of her practice: the intimate, domestic space, the private realm opened to the gaze, the unexpected revelation of lives that resist categorisation and continue to challenge us.
The National Gallery in London presents the first exhibition in the UK dedicated to the 16th-century Flemish painter Catharina van Hemessen. The exhibition brings together many of the artist's surviving signed works, a rare figure in the history of European Renaissance art.
The Wulz Sisters and the Reinvention of Italian Photography
An exhibition that explores the work of Wanda and Marion Wulz, two leading figures in twentieth-century Italian photography. Through portraits, Futurist experiments and images of life in Trieste, the exhibition reveals how the sisters combined artistic innovation with professional practice.
The first major retrospective in over fifty years dedicated to Richard Dadd, one of the most enigmatic artists of the Victorian era, invites us to look beyond his biography to rediscover the visionary power of his painting.
Directly from Venice, Peggy Guggenheim in London: The Making of a Collector arrives in London. The exhibition reconstructs Peggy Guggenheim's role in the London art scene on the eve of World War II, with her intense experience at the Guggenheim Jeune gallery.