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- Chrissy H.Londres, Reino Unido367147725 de jun. de 2016
The Yayoi Kusama exhibition is taking place at present and the venue is perfect for it...albeit a little hot on a warm day.
The queues are pretty long on a weekend as it's only open on Saturday but worth the wait. Everything is super visual and pretty. Really nice experiences.Helpful 2Thanks 0Love this 1Oh no 0 - Oona M.Stourbridge, Reino Unido40572419 de jul. de 2016
I visited this gallery to have a look at the Yayoi Kusama exhibition which is running until the 30th July. I arrived shortly before 10am (opening time) to be greeted with a long queue outside. Thankfully the line moved pretty quickly and I was soon inside. The staff did say that the exhibition is extremely popular on Saturdays so it is probably advisable to get there as close to opening time as possible.
As the exhibition contains several mirrored rooms, which visitors can go in individually or in small groups, you do end up queueing again to get into each one, although the staff are very helpful and good at limiting the time to keeping things moving (you get 20 seconds in the pumpkin room and a minute in the others).
The art itself is very cool, the mirrored rooms are excellent and each provides a very different experience (and some great photo opportunities!) The garden is really relaxing with a big pond containing another installation. If you do visit, make sure you go and have a look at the paintings and also the Rana Begum 'The Space Between' exhibition which is equally beautiful.
I really enjoyed this gallery and exhibition and will definitely be keeping an eye on the listings for future exhibitions at Victoria Miro Gallery.Helpful 2Thanks 0Love this 0Oh no 0 - Michelle R.Londres, Reino Unido1292051822 de nov. de 2016
Victoria Miro is a charming gallery. I came here to see the Yayoi Kusama exhibition. It was every selfie's mission to have a selfie taken in one of the installation that would spread over social media like wildfire. There was a long line right out by the entrance, and I think I waited for over 45 mins. It was raining and I was drenched. Waiting time made it all worth it. Each visitor was given a time slot of check out each installation but I must say the organisation was top notch. However, they had to close one of the installation due to bad weather.
Helpful 0Thanks 0Love this 0Oh no 0 - Karen F.Cingapura121872175 de dez. de 2008
Architectural glamour was the essence of yesterday evenings champagne book launching event. Industrialised spaces are perfect for displaying art. The scale and proportions are enormous to comfort the viewer.
Victoria Miro is a woman who is known for nuturing young artists and her gallery is the perfect place for a pin-up. She works closely with the architectural circle and the likes of Zaha Hadid, Lorenzo Appicella.
The gallery is a multilevelled bare and cold space with narrow alley like staircases leading to larger nooks and crannies. But the generosity of scale is appealing to display works of art. Good outdoor space has been used to create a water body which speaks poetry.
Something that was most interesting to me was in a room filled with people chatting away, you can almost feel the sound of gushing water or a stream. Its a calming sound when your absent from the space, in the presence its madness and chaos.
Monday visits to the gallery are by appointment only.Helpful 0Thanks 0Love this 0Oh no 0 - Glen S.Londres, Reino Unido721820815 de dez. de 2008
Victoria Miro is quite renowned in the art world for the artists she represents and also for the prescience of her own vision. Having expanded into a glorious new space on Wharf Road (occupying an upper floor above Parasol Unit next door as well), the impact of her work is felt heavily in the London art scene, and an opening here is definitely worth attending, if only to know that you are drinking shit Chablis with the already made. And who knows: maybe it will even be good. The Chablis, that is. The show is more than certain to be noteworthy.
Helpful 1Thanks 0Love this 0Oh no 0 - Usuário do Qype (Helean…)Londres, Reino Unido531092415 de nov. de 2008
So far, I've only been talking about places that I have an undisputed and passionate bias towards and the Victoria Miro is no exception. On a desolate road on the Hackney-Islington border and perilously close to McDonalds, it's the last place you'd expect to find a paragon of aesthetic brilliance until you walk in. Boasting the likes of Chris Ofili, Grayson Perry and Isaac Julien on its roster (who also happen to be three of my favourite artists - if they exhibited Jake and Dinos Chapman too I'd move into the place), it is now hosting a jaw dropping show by Elmgreen and Dragset, in which visitors are met by a total transformation of the gallery's interior architecture via several new interconnecting large-scale installations. You will walk through what is described as a party that's already over: lights are still blinking and the disco ball sadly spinning, but there's no-one on the dance floor, and the last round has been served long ago.
If you're lucky enough in future to get into one of the previews (for that try First Thursday, or just get onto their mailing list; mere mortals are allowed - you don't have to be the next Charles Saatchi or anything) you'll also get to relax, drink wine and pretend to be intellectual on their gorgeous venranda, which has a paradoxically not-so-gorgeous view of weeds, a pond backing onto some old warehouse. The show ends on the 15th so best hurry on down!Helpful 0Thanks 0Love this 0Oh no 0 - Usuário do Qype (Amanda…)Londres, Reino Unido01712 de nov. de 2007
The Victoria Miro gallery is unprepossessing from the outside: it's tucked behind McDonald's just off City Road and you press a bell to be admitted. Inside it isn't that easy to find your way around - the gallery consists of the original building, plus an extension over the neighbouring Parasol Unit Foundation of Contemporary Art. You nip from one to the other via the back terrace.
The extension would be worth seeing even if it was empty. Conceived by minimalist Claudio Silvestrin, it's wonderfully open, white, clean and sleek, with views over this rapidly changing part of London. When I visited it was occupied by huge, dense and disorientating black and white paintings by Yayoi Kusama, commissioned for the space and suiting it perfectly.
The original building is less arresting and even slightly run down - it felt slightly dangerous picking my way up a wooden staircase in the dark to see Phil Collins' video installation - but it's another large and versatile space.
The gallery is free and you'll find your way into the Parasol Unit at the same time. Well worth a visit.Helpful 0Thanks 0Love this 0Oh no 0 - Usuário do Qype (Doirea…)Londres, Reino Unido186611 de jun. de 2008
The huge space of this gallery takes you by suprise. The outside street is your typical East London 'gallery street' that at first seems like the backend of warehouses until you notice the sleekly designed titles on the doors denoting their art secrets inside. When I visited this space, I was fortunate enough to see the wonderful and crazy Yayoi Kusama's exhibition. The vastness of the gallery space clearly facilitated Kusama's famous psychedelic environments, allowing an enjoyable playground of madness for spectators! Also, there is a garden and a third gallery space that's actually located in the building next door, which houses the Parasol Unit. This can be abit confusing, but on the up hand, why not take in two shows?
Helpful 0Thanks 0Love this 0Oh no 0 - Mike C.Langport, Reino Unido01512 de mai. de 2013
Deceptively large almost secret gallery complete with cosy shop. Took me a while to find but was worth the walk, exhibiting emerging as well as established artists over three floors (beware the stairs!)
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