Huxley-Parlour Gallery

Huxley-Parlour Gallery A leading gallery for modern and contemporary art in London. All exhibitions are free of charge.

Huxley-Parlour Gallery, founded in London in 2010, is a forward-thinking modern and contemporary art gallery. Representing over 25 artists and estates across a wide range of mediums, the gallery’s dynamic programme is committed to creating a dialogue between those artists who have made an impact on recent art history, and those who are at its vanguard today.

The Northeast Corridor17 July - 12 September 20263-5 Swallow Street & 45 Maddox StreetPrivate View: 16 July, 6-8pmPresen...
17/06/2026

The Northeast Corridor

17 July - 12 September 2026

3-5 Swallow Street & 45 Maddox Street
Private View: 16 July, 6-8pm

Presented artists: Katherine Bradford, Joe Bradley, Kathy Butterly, Lois Dodd, Nicole Eisenman, Allison Gildersleeve, Mala lqbal, Alex Katz, Roberto Lugo, Lisa Sanditz, Peter
Saul, Dasha Shishkin, Judith Simonian, Simi Stone, Daniel Um, and Peter Williams.

Huxley-Parlour are delighted to announce 'The Northeast Corridor', a group exhibition bringing together an intergenerational selection of artists whose lives and practices are anchored along the eponymous rail artery stretching from Washington, D.C. to Boston, with outposts extending into Maine and Delaware. Presented across our Swallow Street and Maddox Street galleries, and co-curated with Lisa Sanditz, the exhibition maps a diverse yet interconnected terrain of artistic production, reflecting the networks, exchanges and communities that have long shaped the cultural landscape of the American Northeast.

Joel Meyerowitz, 'New York City' (1978).Throughout his career, Joel Meyerowitz has approached the streets of New York wi...
16/06/2026

Joel Meyerowitz, 'New York City' (1978).

Throughout his career, Joel Meyerowitz has approached the streets of New York with a sensitivity to the fleeting and often overlooked moments of everyday life. Attentive to what he describes as the ‘nearly invisible’, his photographs reveal unexpected moments of harmony within the city's constant movement and complexity.

Joel Meyerowitz

View Joel Meyerowitz’ work at 3–5 Swallow Street, open 10am-5:30pm on weekdays and 1:30pm-5:30pm on Saturdays.

15/06/2026

"The tightness, the flatness, the wrong dimensions of things feels so real in a way - so real to our inner worlds."

Filmed at her Brixton studio, Nina Silverberg reflects on the influences that inform her practice. From Giotto's frescoes in Assisi to the architecture she encountered growing up in Italy, Silverberg describes her fascination with the compressed spaces, flattened forms and shifting proportions of early Italian painting.

These ideas resonate throughout her current exhibition, 'Blue Hours', where buildings, books, furniture and architectural fragments evoke the lived experience of the individual within a wider environment. Through geometric forms, repeated motifs and aerial perspectives, Silverberg examines perception and the interplay between obfuscation and clarity, creating works that operate at the border between the internal and external.



To watch the full film, visit the link below.

https://huxleyparlour.com/in-film/blue-hours/

Raphael Barratt, 'Seeing In The Telling' (2026), oil on board, 20 x 16 1/4 inches.Influenced by the ancient landscape in...
13/06/2026

Raphael Barratt, 'Seeing In The Telling' (2026), oil on board, 20 x 16 1/4 inches.

Influenced by the ancient landscape in which she grew up, Raphael Barratt explores ways of using landscape to establish both the mood and aesthetic structure of her work. Inspired by Indian miniatures, as well as the sculptural stillness and techniques of the early Renaissance, particularly those of Giotto and Piero della Francesca, Barratt’s paintings do not seek to define topographical truth but rather allude to the specific atmosphere of moments experienced within a place or landscape, both in the present and in memory.

To learn more or enquire about the work, visit our website via the link in our bio.



https://huxleyparlour.com/artwork/seeing-in-the-telling/

AC Larsen, 'So Many Flowers' (2026), Concrete, Grandma’s tablecloth, dried roses, 18 x 22 x 18 inches.Currently on view ...
13/06/2026

AC Larsen, 'So Many Flowers' (2026), Concrete, Grandma’s tablecloth, dried roses, 18 x 22 x 18 inches.

Currently on view at our Swallow Street gallery, AC Larsen’s sculptural work explores the social, political and metaphysical realities of inhabiting a trans body. Drawing on pop culture, fashion, religious iconography and collective nostalgia, Larsen reconfigures familiar visual languages to interrogate contemporary q***r experience and the power structures that shape it. Through layered installations and charged material relationships, the artist examines how bodies are constructed and perceived, reflecting on vulnerability, ritual, belonging and the conditions of q***r existence within contemporary society.



Visit AC Larsen’s current exhibition, 'Spiritus Sanctus', at 3–5 Swallow Street, open 10am-5:30pm on weekdays and 1:30pm-5:30pm on Saturdays.



https://huxleyparlour.com/conduit/spiritus-sanctus/

Nina Silverberg's 'Blue Hours' continues until 11 July at our Maddox Street gallery.The exhibition’s title refers to the...
12/06/2026

Nina Silverberg's 'Blue Hours' continues until 11 July at our Maddox Street gallery.

The exhibition’s title refers to the period of nightime before darkness gives way to dawn, a time associated with stillness, reflection and heightened perception. Using this liminal moment as a point of departure, Silverberg explores the relationship between obscurity and clarity. Paintings of densely packed architecture, reduced to geometric grids, are set against more isolated structures that draw attention to individual architectural details, reflecting the paradoxical notion of darkness as a form of illumination.

View 'Blue Hours' at 45 Maddox Street, open 11am-5:30pm on weekdays and 10am-1pm on Saturdays.



https://huxleyparlour.com/exhibitions/blue-hours/

Jamie Hawkesworth, 'L'Empordà' (2025)Created during a journey through Empordà, on Spain's Mediterranean coast, Jamie Haw...
12/06/2026

Jamie Hawkesworth, 'L'Empordà' (2025)

Created during a journey through Empordà, on Spain's Mediterranean coast, Jamie Hawkesworth's 'L'Empordà' series combines black-and-white and colour photographs of rugged rock formations, native flora and luminous seascapes. Sculpted by wind and sea, the region's distinctive landscape is transformed through Hawkesworth's sensitive use of light, colour and composition.

Shot on analogue film and developed by the artist himself, the series reflects the artist's deliberate yet unobtrusive approach to image-making, balancing careful observation with the possibility of chance encounters.
hawkesworth

To learn more or enquire about the works, visit our website via the link in our bio.



https://huxleyparlour.com/artists/jamie-hawkesworth/

Artist spotlight: Sarah Schlesinger (b. 1988)Often working on a small scale, Sarah Schlesinger paints obstructed landsca...
11/06/2026

Artist spotlight: Sarah Schlesinger (b. 1988)

Often working on a small scale, Sarah Schlesinger paints obstructed landscapes. Blocked by objects, such as bushes and other obfuscations, she creates scenes that are filled with metaphor and mystery, exploring the psychology of looking. Using a monochromatic palette, Schlesinger’s works on panel are an investigation of colour and form.

To learn more, or enquier about Schlesinger's work, visit our website via the link in our bio.



https://huxleyparlour.com/artists/sarah-schlesinger/

Joel Meyerowitz, 'Subway, Brooklyn' (2004), archival pigment print.Joel Meyerowitz began his career in the 1960s photogr...
10/06/2026

Joel Meyerowitz, 'Subway, Brooklyn' (2004), archival pigment print.

Joel Meyerowitz began his career in the 1960s photographing the streets of New York, using both black-and-white and colour film to capture fleeting and often surreal moments. Widely recognised as one of the photographers who helped establish colour photography as a fine art medium, Meyerowitz has long explored the camera’s ability to convey not only what is seen, but also what is felt.

Currently on view at our Swallow Street gallery, 'Select Works, 1962–2019' brings together key works spanning nearly six decades of the artist’s career, alongside photographs exhibited for the first time, tracing the evolution of his photographic voice and pioneering approach to the medium.



View Joel Meyerowitz’s work at 3–5 Swallow Street, open 10am-5:30pm on weekdays and 1:30pm-5:30pm on Saturdays.



https://huxleyparlour.com/artwork/subway-brooklyn/

09/06/2026

'Nina Silverberg: Blue Hours' continues at our Maddox Street gallery until 11 July.

The artist's second solo exhibition with the gallery presents a suite of new paintings that explore stillness, perception, and transformation. Taking its title from the period of nighttime when stillness falls, the exhibition reflects on moments of quiet introspection and suspended atmosphere.



View 'Blue Hours' at 45 Maddox Street, open 11am-5:30pm on weekdays and 10am-1pm on Saturdays.

Pictured:
Tower (2026), oil on wood, 16 x 12 x 1 inches.



https://huxleyparlour.com/exhibitions/blue-hours/

Address

3/5 Swallow Street
London
W1B4DE

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 10am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 10am - 5:30pm
Thursday 10am - 5:30pm
Friday 10am - 5:30pm
Saturday 10am - 5:30pm

Telephone

+442074344319

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