地址: Riverside Building, County Hall, Bishop's, London SE1 7PB
When the gigantic Great Wheel of London was built for the Empire of India Exhibition, later being used for the Imperial Austrian Exhibition as well, its 94 metres dwarfed any other building. When this behemoth was inaugurated at Earl’s Court on July 17, 1895, it was the largest ferris wheel on Earth, as well as London’s tallest structure. Besides its human passengers, the wheel was also a popular hangout for birds. In fact, in 1900, a cleaning person found a Goldcrest - the smallest bird in Great Britain - roosting inside one of the Wheel’s cars. The wheel was designed by Walter Basset, who was inspired by the 1893 ferris wheel of Chicago, which ran on steam and had forty cars to carry as many people and was considered an engineering marvel at the time. But by the end of the century, the curiosity regarding the wheel faded and it became a silent mostly-unused fixture. It was demolished in 1907 after having carried around 2.5 million passengers during its career. But its end came when, thanks to a malfunction, 74 people were left trapped for four-and-a-half hours. Its steel was sent to South Wales, where it was converted into containers for mustard and cookies.
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.
Wimbledon 2026 returns to London, balancing tradition with new technology such as video review. Sinner, Alcaraz and Djokovic lead a new phase of tennis on the sport’s most iconic grass courts.
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 Design Museum in London presents the first international retrospective of Nigo, a journey through three decades that reshaped the relationship between streetwear, luxury and global pop culture.