Visit the second biggest Conservatory in London and explore our hidden tropical oasis. The Conservatory is closed for public visits on any dates which are not listed. Admission is free. Tickets for ...
Log in to access bookings, e-tickets, update your email preferences and check out faster.
Join us on Saturday mornings to start your cinematic journey as a family! Welcome to Family Film Club, where your little ones can embark on their cinematic journey with carefully curated screenings ...
Douglas Sirk's 1959 melodrama based on Fannie Hurst's 1933 novel about two single mothers, one black, one white, striving together in a man's world. Sirk’s lush melodrama examines the intersecting ...
Bring along baby for our weekly film screenings of the latest new releases each Monday and Saturday morning. Enjoy the best new films on the big screen with your little ones of twelve months and under ...
'Is there a better chamber orchestra in the world?' (The Guardian). Australia's premiere ensemble performs works by JS Bach, Sofia Gubaidalina and Shostakovich. With a zany finale that takes no ...
Thank you for joining us in The Pit for four works in progress as part of FuelFest, a two-week festival celebrating adventurous new work. We welcome four exceptional artists, Racheal Ofori, Jay ...
Pianist Sunwook Kim multi-tasks with the high octane Chamber Orchestra of Europe in a concert featuring Beethoven's Piano Concertos 3 and 4. C minor turbulence doesn’t just colour Beethoven’s Piano ...
Log in to access bookings, e-tickets, update your email preferences and check out faster.
The Indonesian artist transforms The Curve in her first solo UK exhibition. Via painting, installation, embroidery and scent, take a sensory journey exploring ancestral memory, ritual and migration.
Step into the heart of London’s Brutalist legacy. Did you know the Barbican’s theatre and concert hall go deeper underground than the nearest Tube line; early plans for the Centre included a Pyramid; ...
Journey into the unknown with musical pioneer Jordi Savall and Hespèrion XXI in a concert inspired by the 14th-century Islamic scholar Ibn Battuta, and narrated by Peaky Blinders actor Assaad Bouab.