Coming Soon
04 Jun - 07 Sep 2025
Gallery 2
Monday | Closed |
Tuesday | 11am–6pm |
Wednesday | 11am–6pm |
Thursday | 11am–9pm |
Friday | 11am–6pm |
Saturday | 11am–6pm |
Sunday | 11am–6pm |
Whitechapel Gallery is committed to making all of our exhibitions as accessible as possible for every visitor. Please contact access@whitechapelgallery.org if you would like to discuss a particular request and we will gladly discuss with you the best way to accommodate it.
For complete access information about the gallery, please visit https://www.whitechapelgallery.org/visit/access/.
The London Open – Whitechapel Gallery’s open call exhibition – is back with a live art focus for its 2025 edition: London Open Live.
Application deadline: 13 Jan 2025
Exhibition and programme: 4 Jun – 7 Sep 2025Originally established in 1932 as an open call exhibition to showcase local artists and the creative energy of the East End, The London Open has evolved over the years to encompass the whole city as a hub of global artistic activity and offer a potent snapshot of prescient themes and issues. It has provided an important launch pad for a great range of artists including Larry Achiampong, Frank Bowling, Alice Channer, Anish Kapoor, Heather Phillipson, Paula Rego, Veronica Ryan, and Bob and Roberta Smith.
For 2025, the Open’s focus will be on performance and live art. The live art scene was badly hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, not least due to the cancellation of live events and programmes during the various lockdowns. This inevitably resulted in decreased visibility as well as lack of investment and support. London Open Live aims to create new opportunities for artists working across live art practices, while showcasing the importance of collective activity, of coming together and fostering intimacy through a dynamic programme of new and recent live art.
A panel comprising artists and experts in the field, alongside Whitechapel Gallery curatorial staff, will select a range of work and approaches that represent and explores live art practices in London and collectively reflects on ideas and possibilities of ‘openness’ and ‘liveness’ today.
The London Open Live programme will feature work by established and emerging artists who work across definitions of ‘live art’, and builds on Whitechapel Gallery’s long history of commissioning and staging performance and live art. Performances will take place Thursdays to Sundays throughout Summer 2025 and will be accompanied by a film and talks programme looking at contemporary performance and live art practice.
The application process for London Open Live is being managed by Artquest – a public programme of University of the Arts London (UAL) – to ensure that that the open call offers a range of accessible options for applicants and is informed by Artquest’s extensive research into open call procedures across the arts sector.
London Open Live is open to individual artists or collaborative groups who meet the following criteria:
Collaborative applications are eligible as long as at least one member of the group meets the criteria above. However, all applicants should be at least 18 years of age.
Whitechapel Gallery recognises that some artists face structural barriers as a result of disability, gender or gender expression, socio-economic backgrounds, sexuality, age, ethnic origin, religion, pregnancy and experience of migration. We particularly encourage applications from artists from historically under-served groups.
Up to 13 applicants will be invited to participate in London Open Live through an open application process. London Open Live will showcase work made by artists at any stage in their careers, bringing together a diverse range of original and exciting ideas and practices from both emerging and established artists.
Selection will be informed by ensuring a balance of career stages and live practices, work that reflects on and exemplifies the importance of live art today and aligns with Whitechapel Gallery’s responsibility as a public institution and belief in supporting collaborative, permeable, bold practices that are unafraid to take risks and/or address issues and concerns relevant to the times we live in.
Selection will be informed by ensuring a balance of career stages and live practices, work that reflects on and exemplifies the importance of live art today and aligns with Whitechapel Gallery’s responsibility as a public institution and focus on supporting collaborative, permeable, bold practices that are unafraid to take risks and/or address relevant issues.
Applications and works will be selected by a panel of artists and curators with particular experience of and interest in live art practices:
Selected artists will be awarded:
The application form will be active from Thursday 28 November 2024, with a deadline of Monday 13 January 2025.
To apply, fill out the application form and refer to the FAQs for any questions.
We want to ensure the application process is not a barrier for any artist wanting to apply. If you need further clarification, please contact ArtQuest.
Anne Bean is a London-based artist whose artistic practice, spanning over 50 years, has been pivotal in the development of live and performance art in the UK. Captivated by processes, she is a multidisciplinary artist working with sculpture, installation, sound, photography, painting and drawing. Since 1970, Bean has presented solo and collaborative projects worldwide. Recent solo projects include Reflect (2023), commissioned by Lumiere, Durham, and Sparks and Spells (2022), commissioned by Turner Contemporary, Margate for the exhibition Stephen Cripps: In Real Life. Recent group exhibitions include Women in Revolt: Art and Activism in the UK 1970–90, Tate Britain, London (2023). Collaboration is central to Bean’s work, and she recently worked with Zambian artist Serah Chule at the Venice Biennale 2024. She is engaged in ongoing work with women from countries of conflict as a member of the collective PAVES; as well as her worldwide, sound exploration, as part of Bow Gamelan Ensemble (1983-1990), on which a new film, funded by DACS Recollect programme, will be premiered at Tate in 2025. Bean was the recipient of the Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award, 2024
Lois Keidan co-founded the Live Art Development Agency (LADA) in 1999 and was its Director until 2021. Previously she was Director of Live Arts at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), London (1992-1998); responsible for national policy and provision for Performance Art and Interdisciplinary practices at the Arts Council of Great Britain (1990-1992); and worked at Midland Group, Nottingham and Theatre Workshop, Edinburgh.
Martin O’Brien is an artist who works across performance, writing and video art. His work uses long durational actions, short speculative texts and critical rants to explore death and dying, what it means to be born with a life-shortening disease, and the philosophical implications of living longer than expected. Martin has cystic fibrosis, and all of his work and writing draws upon this experience. He has shown work throughout the UK; Europe; USA; and Canada, both solo performances and collaborations with the legendary LA artist and dominatrix Sheree Rose. Recent works include Until the Last Breath is Lived, Tate Britain (2020), and The Last Breath Society (Coughing Coffin), ICA London (2021), as well as residencies at Whitechapel Gallery (2023) and Southbank Centre (2024). Martin was winner of the Philip Leverhulme Prize for Visual and Performing Arts 2022 and is Senior Lecturer in Live Art at Queen Mary University, London.
Harold Offeh is an artist working in a range of media including performance, video and social arts practice. He has exhibited widely including Tate Britain, London; South London Gallery; Wysing Arts Centre, Cambridge; Studio Museum Harlem, New York; MAC VAL– Val-de-Marne Contemporary Art Museum, Paris; and Art Tower Mito, Mito. His forthcoming solo exhibition will open at Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge in November 2025.
Offeh studied Critical Fine Art Practice at Brighton University, MA Fine Art Photography at the Royal College of Art, and in 2020, completed a practice-based PhD exploring the activation of Black Album covers through durational performance at Leeds Beckett University. He lives in Cambridge and is Interim Head of Programme for MA Contemporary Art Practice at the Royal College of Art, London
Leila Hasham is Head of Exhibitions at Whitechapel Gallery. Prior to that she was Head of Artistic Programme at ICA London (2021-2024) and Deputy Director at Forma (2020-21). Leila was Curator at Barbican Art Gallery in London from 2011-2018 where her major projects included: Francis Upritchard: Wetwang Slack (2018); John Akomfrah: Purple (2017); Trajal Harrell: Hoochie Koochie (2017); Ragnar Kjartansson (2016); Station to Station (2015); Walead Beshty (2014); The Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier (2014); The Bride and the Bachelors: Duchamp with Cage, Cunningham, Rauschenberg and Johns (2013); Bauhaus: Art as Life (2012); and Pioneers of the Downtown Scene: New York 1970s (2011).
Hannah Woods is Assistant Curator at Whitechapel Gallery and she has worked on numerous projects including Zineb Sedira: Dreams Have No Titles (2024), Sonia Boyce: An Awkward Relation (2024)and Peter Kennard: Archive of Dissent (2024), as well as the performance activations for Lygia Clark: The I and the You (2024).Prior to this, she worked at Barbican Art Gallery in London on exhibitions including Noguchi (2021), Carolee Schneemann: Body Politics (2022)and RE/SISTERS: A Lens on Gender and Ecology (2023). Hannah is founding editor of motor dance journal, a print publication dedicated to dance and performance practices, and recently co-curated STAGE/PAGE/SPACE (2024) at San Mei Gallery, London.