This yr, artwork has taken itself out of the gallery and seeped into our video video games, our embroidered quilts, our movies and our ideas. Listed here are our favorite moments from 2025.
Maggi Hambling at 80: what subsequent?
(Picture credit score: Philip Hewitt)
‘I do agree with Matisse, who stated artists ought to have their tongues reduce out for the quantity of rot they speak,’ says Maggi Hambling. Self-effacing, sure, shrewd, sharp and unfailingly trustworthy – however there’s no fear of any rot from the revered, revered, and infrequently feared, Hambling.
Once we go to her in October 2025, within the south London dwelling she has lived and labored in for 40 years, the artist is about to show 80. She is going to mark this milestone with each a joint exhibition with good good friend Sarah Lucas at Sadie Coles HQ and Frankie Rossi Artwork Tasks in London, and the discharge of an illustrated monograph of works from a five-decade profession, from her Sixties research on the East Anglian College of Portray and Drawing to her latest politically and emotionally charged warfare work.
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Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley’s multiplayer expertise at London’s Serpentine invitations guests to attach in the actual world
(Picture credit score: Courtesy of the artist and Serpentine Gallery)
Historically, artwork galleries might be solitary experiences, with guests avoiding eye contact on a stroll round an exhibition. It’s a customized Berlin-based British artist and sport designer Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley is eager to problem, with the artist’s immersive new exhibition at The Serpentine encouraging guests to work together – with one another.
The online game fee, The Delusion, is a multiplayer expertise, inviting viewers to just about enter digital portals. Inside each there are dialog starters, reflecting on each the digital world and its typically vitriolic and harmful real-life penalties. Gamers comply with prompts, and are inspired to interact in trustworthy conversations with themselves and one another.
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Chantal Joffe paints the reality of reminiscence and motherhood in a brand new London present
(Picture credit score: Dario Lasagni)
Chantal Joffe offers in reminiscence. Within the thick, tangible brushstrokes of her work and within the beneficiant sizes of her canvases, we’re invited to find Joffe’s girls – as a result of it’s typically girls she paints, these she admires, or these she is near.
Joffe has a completely distinctive figurative model of portray, eschewing a neat formality for gorgeously expressive brushwork, with the palpability of the paint permitting for a larger freedom within the depictions of the ladies she is portray. Her complicated, multifaceted topics can solely come alive in Joffe’s thickly-drawn sweeps of paint, their nuances and quirks and options recognisably theirs, with out being completely or realistically rendered.
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María Berrío creates fantastical worlds from Japanese-paper collages in New York
(Picture credit score: Victoria Miro)
Within the work of New York-based Colombian artist María Berrío, nothing is kind of because it appears. Otherworldly tales are half fantasy, half reminiscence, delicately rendered in watercolour on Japanese paper. Her work are unexpectedly rife with acquainted and modern detailing, in a gathering of worlds actual and imagined. It’s a model that’s reflective of Berrío herself.
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Artist Qualeasha Wooden explores the digital glitch to weave tales of the Black feminine expertise
(Picture credit score: Courtesy of artist)
What’s a glitch? The consequence of an unstable system, glitches expose a vulnerability to threats, however additionally they open up the potential for change. It’s a duality that fascinates the Philadelphia-based artist Qualeasha Wooden, who jumps into the black gap of web malfunctions in a brand new exhibition, ‘Malware’, at London’s Pippy Houldsworth Gallery.
In a sequence of tapestries, tuftings and movies, Wooden marries modern digital tradition with conventional crafts. In her palms, a digital pixel turns into a single sew. In video works, she creates glitches by compressing textual content file knowledge. ‘On this quest for one thing actual, we produce a whole lot of faux photographs,’ says Wooden. ‘For me, one thing that feels most pure is one thing that’s decomposing, that’s not good or hiding something. It’s about bringing all these issues to the forefront.’
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Residence once more: the artists reframing the home world

(Picture credit score: Norman Wilcox-Geissen)
‘There’s a quieter custom happening, totally different artists deciding there’s one thing actually fascinating on this room to color, moderately than exterior of [it],’ says Scottish painter, Andrew Cranston. ‘Philosophically, you may solely be in a single place at a time, and we spend a whole lot of our lives in rooms, or in restricted areas. I feel there’s a illness, a paranoia, that you simply’re lacking out on one thing over the hill, or a celebration within the subsequent room. It is a simplistic factor however there’s some fact in it – it’s nearly like all of the world’s issues stem from an individual’s lack of ability to be completely satisfied in their very own room.’
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Lubaina Himid and Magda Stawarska uncover the lacking narratives in on a regular basis life tales
(Picture credit score: courtesy of the artist)
Creating worlds and telling tales round marginal communities has lengthy been a ardour for Lubaina Himid, who intertwines historical past, narrative and a centralisation of the Black determine all through her boldly colored works. An extended profession has been punctuated with vital milestones, from Himid’s curation of 1985 exhibition ‘The Skinny Black Line’ at London’s Institute of Up to date Arts, which shone a highlight on underrepresented Black and Asian girls artists, to the taking dwelling of the Turner Prize in 2017. In 2026, Himid is to symbolize Nice Britain on the 61st Venice Biennale, with a solo exhibition on the British Pavilion.
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Artist Shaqúelle Whyte is a grasp of storytelling

(Picture credit score: Courtesy the artist and Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London. Copyright Shaqúelle Whyte 2025. Pictures by Eva Herzog)
Shaqúelle Whyte could also be early in his profession, however his richly atmospheric work have shortly pegged him as a rising star within the artwork world. Born in Wolverhampton, Whyte graduated from the Slade College of Effective Artwork in 2022, happening to obtain an MA from the Royal Faculty of Artwork in 2023. Group exhibitions at Hauser & Wirth, Somerset, and Grimm Amsterdam adopted, in addition to solo exhibitions at Pippy Houldsworth Gallery (his present present ending 8 November 2025).
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Diane Arbus at David Zwirner is an intimate and poignant tribute to her portraiture

(Picture credit score: © The Property of Diane Arbus)
American photographer Diane Arbus was drawn to the opposite, celebrating the fringes of society in a prolific physique of labor created all through the Fifties and Sixties. Her unflinching portraits, together with of nudists, socialists, circus performers and transvestites, awarded her topic a respect which on the time was in any other case fully absent.
A complete exhibition earlier this yr of over 400 works, at New York’s Park Avenue Armory, has returned Arbus firmly again into the general public consciousness. Now, in London, the emphasis shifts to intimacy over scale, with the opening of ‘Diane Arbus: Sanctum Sanctorum,’ an exhibition of 45 images made in personal locations between 1961 and 1971. The exhibition will go on to journey to Fraenkel Gallery in San Francisco in spring 2026.
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Tilda Swinton: ‘If Derek Jarman had been with us now, he’d be making movies on an iPhone’
(Picture credit score: © Ruediger Glatz)
It’s troublesome to outline Tilda Swinton. Actor, performer or artist, Swinton’s chameleonic high quality sees her flit, effortlessly, between worlds, her work a agency rejection of the stereotypically passive nature of the artist. Swinton is all concerning the collaboration. An actor has company, and an opinion.
It’s greater than a tokenism for Swinton, who has fashioned shut and fruitful relationships with filmmakers and photographers all through her life and profession. Persevering with to push on the conventional parameters of performing, she is acknowledging this element of the artistic course of with a brand new position, as curator. The brand new exhibition, ‘Tilda Swinton – Ongoing’ at Eye Filmmuseum, Amsterdam, marks these significant partnerships with the presentation of latest work from Luca Guadagnino, Joanna Hogg, Jim Jarmusch, Olivier Saillard, Tim Walker, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Pedro Almodóvar and the late Derek Jarman.
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Supply: Wallpaper