LifestyleWhats On

What’s On this Week March 11th-18th

Bob Marley One Love Experience
The Bob Marley One Love Experience makes its global debut at the Saatchi Gallery for a 10-week exhibition.

This unique experience will showcase unseen Marley photographs and memorabilia while immersing audiences on a journey through his lifestyle, passions, influences, and enduring legacy.

Fans will venture through the exhibition, greeted by different elements of Bob Marley’s multi-faceted life. The One Love Music Room will commemorate Bob Marley’s achievements through accolades and giant art installations.
Until April 18
Saatchi Gallery


Hamlet
A country under attack. A family falling apart. A mind in turmoil.
Step inside the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse and be transported to the ostentatious court of Elsinore. Intimately lit and warmly welcoming, it’s the perfect palace.

George Fouracres as Hamlet

But ‘something is rotten in the state of Denmark’. Prince Hamlet is shocked that his mother, the Queen, has married his uncle so soon after the death of his father, the King. And when his father’s ghost reveals a dark secret, it’s clear what he ought to do: exact revenge.
Until April 9
The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, The Globe


Art Now: Danielle Dean
Visual artist Danielle Dean’s thought-provoking work explores the colonisation of the mind and body through media and cultural production.

Danielle Dean is at Tate Britain

Drawing on her research in the archives of the Ford Motor Company in Detroit and using footage shot by collaborators across the world, her new multi-channel video installation investigates the changing nature of labour through the labour-crowdsourcing marketplace, “Amazon Mechanical Turk”.
Until May 8
Tate Britain


Rain and Zoe Save the World
Rain and Zoe Save the World tells the story of two teenage climate activists from Washington State who embark on an impulsive motorcycle journey to join a group of oil protesters on the East Coast.

On the way, Rain and Zoe discover that the true danger in this world… might just be growing up.

The show takes you on a journey that explores the ethics of standing up for what you believe whatever the cost.
Until March 12
Jermyn Street Theatre


Small Island
The acclaimed, five-star production of Andrea Levy’s prize-winning novel returns.

Hortense yearns for a new life away from rural Jamaica, Gilbert dreams of becoming a lawyer and Queenie longs to escape her Lincolnshire roots.

Following their lives through the Second World War until the arrival of HMT Empire Windrush at Tilbury, hopes for the future soon meet the stubborn reality of post-war Britain.
National Theatre
Until April 30


Shock of the Form
Gerald Moore Gallery presents Shock of the Form, an exhibition of photography, film and ice sculptures bringing together two artists, photographer Peer Lindgreen and ice sculptor Duncan Hamilton.

The exhibition features 28 photographs by Lindgreen of Hamilton’s work with ice, alongside a giant crystal ice sculpture which takes centre stage in the gallery.

Working collaboratively, the photos took Lindgreen and Hamilton over four years to produce, during which time they were testing the limits of ice with different processes.
Until March 19
Gerald Moore Gallery


Little Red Riding Hood – The Truth!
Everyone thinks they know the story of Little Red Riding Hood and her encounter with a hungry wolf, but what if the characters could tell their own version?

With an investigative journalist on hand to explore the truth of what happened that day in Sydenham Woods, three very different takes on the classic tale will unfold.

The family friendly show features original songs, dance routines and video effects, plus shadow puppetry and lots of audience participation.
Every weekend until April 3
The Sydenham Centre


Mohand and Peter
Mohand and Peter travel everywhere and anywhere in the blink of an eye.

A backflip in time, a quick hop back home, with humour and visual poetry they’ll take you on a road trip through Sudan jumping from one character to another, including Omar Al Bashir, Mohand’s 450 cousins, and a lazy camel.

The show takes reference from Mohand’s own life as a Sudanese man who had to flee his country to seek asylum within the UK.

Using clowning and visual poetry to explore cultural identity and the traumatic effect of long-term exile as well as celebrating refugee home countries.
Until April 2
Southwark Playhouse


Bernardine Evaristo – Black Britain: Writing Back
The author explores works by Black women writers with guests Judith Bryan, Barbara Blake Hannah, Hannah-Azieb Pool, Jacqueline Roy and Nicola Williams.

Join them in a journey through time to discover lost and hard-to-find works about Black Britain and the diaspora, exploring the stories these extraordinary books tell through conversation and readings.
March 13
Purcell Room at Queen Elizabeth Hall


Cherise Hewitt: ‘ArtSvdMe’
South London-based artist, illustrator and printmaker Cherise Hewitt brings together sculpture, textiles and printmaking and explores her own journey towards healing in her new solo show of vibrant and strong beauty at Brixton Library.
Until March 15
Brixton Library


He’s Dead
A dark fantasy, conceptual choreography exploring the question: “Was Tupac depressed?”

Using dance, text and striking visuals, marikiscrycrycry’s He’s Dead delves into the unspoken surrounding mental health in the Black community.

Made in three acts, this compelling work looks at the violence of dehumanisation – highlighting the injustice that if a figure is flawed in any way by their actions, their sadness cannot be heard or acknowledged; heightened endlessly if you are Black.
March 16 to April 2
Battersea Arts Centre


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