Exhibitions

Visit our exhibitions which showcase the work of leading contemporary visual artists, free of charge and open daily.

Gallery Opening Times:
Weekdays 12pm – 5pm
Weekends 12pm – 4pm

Current Exhibitions

Three huge and colourful botanical paintings on a white gallery wall with a bench in front of it.

Tim Fowler: The Ground

18 October 2024 – 26 January 2025, Gallery 1 & 2
Tim Fowler is a Leicester artist best known for his immediately recognisable paintings that feature a palette of extremely bright and intense colours. He works intuitively, combining oil and acrylic with spray paint, enamel, graffiti inks, creating layered compositions that fizz with energy.

This exhibition, entitled ‘The Ground’, after the name that many Bajans give to their gardens, will be the Leicester artist’s largest solo show to date and a personal exploration of the artist’s Bajan heritage, bringing together key pieces from an ongoing body of work that began in 2020. Inspired by the results of a DNA test, Tim started researching his family history, and then became fascinated by plants that have made a migratory journey similar to his own DNA: from West Africa via the Caribbean to the UK.

Tim says: ‘It is important to me that this exhibition comes from a place of learning and represents both the darker colonial history of the journey that my DNA has taken, as well as the cultural beauty expressed and mirrored in the plants that I paint.’

Following a significant period of research and development, Tim’s focus has shifted from plantation crops linked to the transatlantic slave trade, such as tobacco, cotton and indigo, to plants that were used by indigenous and enslaved communities for their practical and medicinal properties. Tim visited Barbados to see first-hand how communities there live with and make use of these plants, and upon his return he spent time with the University of Leicester’s Archives & Special Collections, looking at some of the earliest books that document plants from the Caribbean for a European audience.

The exhibition features in Attenborough Arts Centre’s series of events being held during October 2024 for Black History Month and as part of the Leicester Art Week programme from 8-17 November 2024.

Accompanying the exhibition is a line of posters, postcards, badges and tote bags featuring Tim’s work available for purchase at front desk. These items are available for a limited time so make sure you explore the range when visiting.

BrightSparks presents Inspirations

17 September 2024 – Ongoing, Balcony Gallery
The twenty-fourth annual open exhibition of artworks by mental health service users of Leicester, Leicestershire, Rutland & beyond.

Featuring artworks created in response to pieces from the University of Leicester Collection and pieces created by in-patients at The Bradgate Mental Health.

Funded by The George Ernest Ellis Foundation, participatory Artist Jo Sheppard worked with patients at The ArtSpace Group based at Attenborough Arts Centre for 10 weeks. Artworks from The University of Leicester Art Collection were used to inspire new works in response.

For further information please contact Tim Sayers, Arts in Mental Health Co-ordinator at Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust on 07795 475 806 or tim.sayers1@nhs.net

Upcoming Exhibitions

Sabrina Tirvengadum

7 February – 6 April 2025, Gallery 2
Sabrina’s art delves into the complexities of her Mauritian family history, deeply influenced by the legacies of colonialism.

With a background in photographic arts and graphic design, her work challenges ableist systems and champions inclusivity in digital spaces. Sabrina’s dynamic artistic practice combines collage, digital illustration, AI, and photography, inviting viewers to join her on a journey of self-discovery and reflection.

Crip Arte Spazio: The Disability Arts Movement in Venice

14 February – 11 May 2025, Gallery 1
Presented by Shape, Curated & Creatively Directed by David Hevey, Designed by Nina Shen and Produced by Shape Arts

Shape brings its landmark Crip Arte Spazio: The Disability Arts Movement in Venice exhibition to Leicester, fresh from its presentation at the world-renowned Venice Biennale 2024. The Disability Arts Movement aligned art with the fight for rights, broke barriers, and ultimately affected changes in UK law, while making great art about doing so.

Currently showing during the 60th Venice Biennale, the exhibition is a joyous and exuberant celebration of the Disability Arts Movement, showcasing its dynamism, wit, and grandeur. The exhibition reclaims historical slurs ‘Crip Arte Spazio’ in an unflinching explosion of huge protest banners, cartoon panels, large-scale projected artist films, photography, graphic novels, and campaign merchandise featuring artists Keith Armstrong (supported by the National Disability Movement Archive and Collection), Terence Birch, Tony Heaton OBE, Jameisha Prescod, Abi Palmer, Ker Wallwork, Tanya Raabe-Webber and Jason Wilsher-Mills.

The title Crip Arte Spazio, translated as Crip Art Space, plays on Italian words while reclaiming slurs disabled people have historically and continue to face. We fully support the curators, artists and disabled people in the reclamation of these words.

The project is supported by Arts Council England, British Council, The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Creative Scotland and CREA, Venice, and Art Fund.