The National Portrait Gallery: Rebel Women
Much of London has tried to honour the centenary of the vote for women in some shape or form, but few places are as well equipped to do so as the Nati
Shakespeare to Spoken Word: A Brief History of East London Poets
The East was once the stomping ground of our greatest poets, canons of English Literature and rowdy bards...
Goddess Sanctuary: Where Hollywood Came to Rest
In the aftermath of Hollywood’s Golden Age, in cities all around the world, movie goddesses hid away from the preying eyes in what appeared to be an
‘Underwater, All Pretension Falls Off’: Below the Surface with Barbara Cole
How do you paint a picture of timelessness? How do you capture the feeling of being weightless? Stand before the work of Barbara Cole and you’ll see
NonSense: Staying In Touch
That life of blue pools, soft silks, fresh lobster is still very much spread before us – only now you can zoom in, tap, highlight, copy the image a
Graffiti: Concrete Conversations in Urban Spaces
Think of teenage culprits: the only ones brazen enough for how-on-earth heights...
Discover London: City Lit
Based in Holborn, they teach everything from astronomy, to Arabic, to photo etching. I challenge you to think of a hobby you’ve always longed to try
Theatre Review: The Sleeper
The Sleeper is a real ask of the actors both physically and mentally - it's well-meaning, uncomfortable, funny, sad and unselfconscious. It is part of
Chasing A Rainbow: Bridging Illusion and Reality
We all know what lies at the end of a rainbow — that proverbial pot of gold, that something much sought after but impossible to attain. But how do r
Photographer in Residence: Diana Vucane
In theatre, the little things matter. You may not know it, but just think: the first, creaking step an actor takes on stage; the tiny pause before a c