Compiled by Stephen Armstrong, Hugh Canning, Mark Edwards, Helen Hawkins, Waldemar Januszczak, David Jays, Cosmo Landesman, Patricia Nicol and Hugh Pearman
Win tickets to the ATP finals

Film
Film pick
INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL
MAY 22
The stunts will be real, ditto the creaks in Harrison Ford’s 65-year-old
bones. Can Steven Spielberg also revive the larky spirit of his
turbo-charged B-movies, 19 years on? Karen Allen is back as old squeeze
Marion Ravenwood, Shia LaBeouf is a potential Indy Mk II and Cate Blanchett
pops up as a bobbed Russian baddie. The plot is strictly under wraps, but
the setting, at least, is fixed: 1957, deep into the cold war.
SEX AND THE CITY
MAY 28
Will Big and Carrie tie the knot? How is Samantha’s falsie holding up? Will
the product placement be as blatant as it was on the small screen? And will
we be reminded again why these four women’s sex lives once dominated our
television schedules?
MONGOL
JUNE 6
The latest violent autocrat to get a makeover is Genghis Khan. The first part
of a possible trilogy, this Oscar-nominated Kazakh film covers the rise to
world-conquering power of the Mongolian warrior now correctly known as
Chingis. Its aim is revisionist (this is Genghis as seen by his own side)
and its look is impressively, artily epic. A blast – in Mongolian.
THE INCREDIBLE HULK
JUNE 13
After the dampish squib of Ang Lee’s version, Louis Leterrier directs, with
Edward Norton as Bruce Banner and Tim Roth as the villain. The buzz from
comic-book fans this time is positive.
THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: PRINCE CASPIAN
JUNE 26
The Pevensies again come to the rescue in Narnia, where an evil tyrant has
exiled the true heir, Caspian (played by Ben Barnes). Keep your ears tuned
for Eddie Izzard as Reepicheep the mouse and David Walliams as Bulgy Bear.
GET SMART
JULY 11
The new king of comedy, Steve Carell, promises to be ideal casting as Maxwell
Smart, the gloriously inept secret agent from the 1960s series. One of the
summer’s more amiable comedies.
MAMMA MIA!
JULY 11
The team behind the megahit Abba musical – director Phyllida Lloyd and writer
Catherine Johnson – bring it to the big screen. Meryl Streep and Pierce
Brosnan put on their dancing shoes. Will it have you singing along in your
seat?
THE DARK KNIGHT
JULY 25
Christopher Nolan is back to direct the latest in the Batman franchise. You
can count on him for dark atmospherics, and on Christian Bale for
stern-jawed playing-it-straight in the lead. But, let’s face it, the main
draw will be Heath Ledger’s Joker, which promises to be a brilliant epitaph.
THE X-FILES: I WANT TO BELIEVE
AUGUST 1
David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson are dragged out of retirement for a second
feature about Mulder and Scully, again directed by Chris Carter. Red-herring
plot summaries have been released, so it’s anybody’s guess what the story
line really is: one thing we do know is that Billy Connolly turns up in a
cameo.
THE DUCHESS
AUGUST 29
One of the few frock-fests of the season, this adaptation of Amanda Foreman’s
bestselling biography of the extraordinary Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire,
stars Keira Knightley as the late-18th-century campaigning It girl, friend
of Charles Fox and Sheridan.
Theatre
Theatre pick
DAVID TENNANT’S HAMLET
JULY 24-NOVEMBER 15
Having triumphed as Doctor Who, can he win over hearts and minds as the prince
of Denmark? It’s a homecoming for Tennant: he was famed as a stage actor
long before he got into the Tardis. Gregory Doran directs. Courtyard,
Stratford-upon-Avon; www.rsc.org.uk
CHICHESTER FESTIVAL THEATRE
UNTIL OCTOBER
The high-wattage draw will be Diana Rigg, in The Cherry Orchard (from May 15).
Already in the Minerva is Samantha Spiro, trying to dispel memories of
Streisand as Funny Girl (in preview). www.cft.org.uk
BLACK WATCH
MAY 7-17, JUNE 20-JULY 26
There was no better calling card for the newly formed National Theatre of
Scotland than Gregory Burke’s play based on interviews with soldiers about
the regiment’s last tour of duty in Iraq. A 2006 Edinburgh Fringe hit, it
has been fêted on Broadway. Now England and Wales get to see what the fuss
is about as it visits Salford and Gwent, then spends a month at the
Barbican. www.nationaltheatrescotland.com
NEW MUSICALS IN LONDON
FROM MAY 7
Ending the Jonathan Kent-directed season at the Theatre Royal Haymarket is
Marguerite, starring Ruthie Henshall. A love story set in occupied Paris, it
has pedigree: the composer is Michel Legrand and the libretto is by Les
Mis’s Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg. From Wednesday. www.marguerite-themusical.com
The Shameless writer Danny Brocklehurst has penned the script of Never
Forget! The Take That Musical, at the Savoy theatre from Wednesday. www.neverforgetthemusical.com
Sadler’s Wells has West Side Story and The Wizard of Oz is at the Festival
Hall from July 23. www.southbankcentre.co.uk
PETER HALL COMPANY
MAY 7-AUGUST 30
The Old Vic has Pygmalion, with the versatile Michelle Dockery, the hit of
the company’s 2007 Bath season. www.oldvictheatre.com
From July 3, at the Theatre Royal, Bath, the 2008 season has new versions of
The Portrait of a Lady and A Doll’s House, starring Catherine McCormack, and
Alan Bennett’s Enjoy, with Alison Steadman. www.theatreroyal.org.uk
NATIONAL THEATRE FROM MAY 27
Rory Kinnear, the recent winner of the Sunday Times/NT Ian Charleson award,
may be our most consistently enjoyable young stage actor. After last year’s
scene-stealing fop in The Man of Mode, he’s back on the Olivier stage in
Middleton’s The Revenger’s Tragedy (from May 27). In the Lyttelton, from
June 3, is Michael Frayn’s new play, Afterlife, with Roger Allam as the
impresario Max Reinhardt at the time of the Austrian Anschluss. From July
21, it is joined in rep by Harold Pinter’s A Slight Ache, with another
national – and National – treasure, Simon Russell Beale. From July 23, in
the Cottesloe, Katie Mitchell reunites two of her favourite young stars, Ben
Whishaw and Hattie Morahan, in . . . Some Trace of Her, based on
Dostoevsky’s The Idiot. That theatre hosts the youth-targeted New
Connections festival, which spends a weekend at the Latitude festival.
www.nationaltheatre.co.uk
Comedy
DANIEL KITSON
UNTIL JUNE 15
The creatively ambitious but determinedly antishowbiz young comic is touring
his sardonic new show, The Impotent Fury of the Privileged. Oxymoronic
comedy at its best. Various venues; www.danielkitson.com
CHRIS ROCK
MAY 23-30
America’s finest current stand-up brings his superb and incendiary show to the
UK for two dates at London’s O2 and one each at the Edinburgh Playhouse and
Manchester Apollo. www.chrisrock.com
LEE MACK, HARRY HILL AND PAUL ZENON
JUNE 2-18
A curious trio of unusually mismatched comics takes to the road for a cheerful
old-fashioned fundraiser – in a bus. Various towns; www.thewonderbus.org
THE THREE FELLAS
JUNE 14
As part of Liverpool’s year as European Capital of Culture, three of Ireland’s
best stand-ups, Dylan Moran, Ardal O’Hanlon and Tommy Tiernan, share a stage
for the first time ever – and for one night only. As Moran explains:
“There’s a great bond. So many Irish people emigrating to America got stuck
in Liverpool by accident.” Liverpool Echo Arena; www.allgigs.co.uk
EDINBURGH FRINGE FESTIVAL
AUGUST 3-25
This is still the easiest place to find live comedy over the summer – all the
rising stars, with flying visits from big names, so you have the chance to
see truly excellent and truly dreadful comedy side by side. www.edfringe.com
Opera
Opera pick
BBC PROMS
JULY 18-SEPTEMBER 13
Roger Wright’s first season is big on anniversaries – oodles of Messiaen and
Vaughan Williams, a smattering of Happy Birthdays for Elliott Carter’s 100th
– but a bit short on absolute must-hear concerts. Two featuring Rattle’s
Berlin Phil, pairing Wagner’s Tristan Prelude with Messiaen’s Turangalîla,
Brahms’s Third and Shostakovich’s 10th Symphonies, should be memorable.
DON CARLO
JUNE 6-JULY 3
Nicholas Hytner returns to Covent Garden for a star-studded production of
Verdi’s Schiller-based grand opera, starring Rolando Villazon (left),
Ferruccio Furlanetto and the Russian beauty Marina Poplavskaya. Antonio
Pappano conducts. www.royalopera.org
GLYNDEBOURNE’S L’INCORONAZIONE DI POPPEA
MAY 18-JULY 4
Monteverdi’s masterpiece gets its third production at Glyndebourne, with the
American starlet Danielle de Niese singing the upwardly mobile mistress of
Nero (Alice Coote). Robert Carsen directs, Emmanuelle Haïm conducts (14
performances; also at BBC Proms, July 31, in concert). www.glyndebourne.com
PHILHARMONIA/ VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
MAY 22, 31, JUNE 20, 22
Richard Hickox conducts the first half of a complete cycle of the nine Vaughan
Williams symphonies at the Festival Hall (to be completed in November) and
two rare semi-stagings of his final Bunyan opera, The Pilgrim’s Progress, at
Sadler’s Wells. www.philharmonia.co.uk
ALDEBURGH FESTIVAL
JUNE 13-29
Friday, June 27, seems to be the key day: the Arditti Quartet gives the world
premieres of Harrison Birtwistle’s arrangements of two Bach Fugues, as well
as the UK premiere of his new string quartet, The Tree of Strings. In the
morning, Katherine Broderick and Philip Carmichael sing songs by Robert and
Clara Schumann and Britten, while late-night London Voices do Stockhausen’s
Stimmung. www.aldeburgh.co.uk
ENO’S CANDIDE
JUNE 23-JULY 12
Robert Carsen’s snazzy staging, from Paris’s Châtelet, updates Bernstein’s
ironic Voltairean romp to the 1950s. Toby Spence looks ideal casting as the
title’s optimistic youth. Anna Christy is Cunégonde, Alex Jennings
guest-stars as Pangloss. www.eno.org
BUXTON FESTIVAL
JULY 9-27
England’s most charming festival town offers its own stagings of operatic
rarities – Lortzing’s Der Wildschütz, Handel’s Samson and a fascinating
English triple bill comprising Holst’s Savitri and The Wandering Scholar,
and Vaughan Williams’s Riders to the Sea, based on Synge – in Frank
Matcham’s gem of an opera house. www.buxtonfestival.co.uk
LONGBOROUGH’S RHEINGOLD
JULY 15, 17, 19
Back by public demand, the Cotswolds country-house company revives 2007’s
staging of Wagner’s Das Rheingold, the first in its ambitious project to
mount a complete rural Ring cycle, conducted by the Wagnerian specialist
Anthony Negus. www.lfo.org.uk
HALLE’S DREAM OF GERONTIUS
JULY 17
Bryn Terfel heads a starry lineup as the Priest and Angel of Agony in Elgar’s
oratorio masterpiece, the highlight of Mark Elder’s Elgar cycle with the
Hallé Orchestra and Choir at Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall. Paul Groves is
Gerontius, Alice Coote the Angel. www.halle.co.uk
; www.bridgewater-hall.co.uk
EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
AUGUST 8-31
Jonathan Mills’s second festival looks nothing like his first, but it relies
to a greater extent on familiar concert programming from London. Scottish
Opera’s new production of Smetana’s enchanting The Two Widows (August 9,
11-12) and an offbeat Mariinsky season, including Karol Szymanowski’s King
Roger (August 25, 27), conducted by the ubiquitous Valery Gergiev, could be
collectable. www.eif.co.uk
Pop
Pop pick
JAY-Z AT GLASTONBURY
JUNE 27-29
Just as festivals were getting all cosy, corporate and comfortable, the Eavis
family injected controversy by bringing in a hip-hop star to headline. Is
this why ticket sales were slower than usual? Are festival-going music fans
genre bigots? Glastonbury suddenly seems exciting again. www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk
KYLIE
MAY 6-AUGUST 4
The pop princess kicks off her European tour, KylieX2008, in Paris on the back
of her new single, In My Arms. She hits London for a sevennight stretch on
July 26. www.kylie.com
PUBLIC ENEMY
MAY 21-28
The highlight of this year’s Don’t Look Back season, in which bands play a
classic album in its entirety, should be Chuck D and the crew’s return to It
Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. Tour starts at Carling Academy,
Bristol; www.allgigs.co.uk
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
MAY 28-JUNE 14
Closing in on 60, Broooooooooce may not manage the four-hour sets he used to,
but the energy generated by the E Street Band remains at euphoric levels.
Tour to Manchester, London and Cardiff starts on May 28; www.ticketmaster.co.uk
ISOBEL CAMPBELL AND MARK LANEGAN
JUNE 10-13
Running neck and neck with Robert Plant and Alison Krauss as Best Musical
Pairing We Really Weren’t Expecting, Campbell and Lanegan will be touring
their second album, Sunday at Devil Dirt, to Shepherd’s Bush Empire, W12,
Brighton, Manchester and Glasgow. www.egigs.co.uk
MELTDOWN
JUNE 14-22
With Massive Attack curating the South Bank Centre’s annual event, we’ll be
seeing some acts that we might have expected (Horace Andy, Terry Callier,
Martina Topley-Bird) and some more surprising choices (Gong, Yellow Magic
Orchestra, and a live run-through of the Blade Runner soundtrack), as well
as two shows by the band themselves. www.southbankcentre.co.uk/all-events/meltdown
LEONARD COHEN
JUNE 17-AUGUST 3
The man’s first European tour in nearly two decades includes four trips to our
shores. Four nights at Manchester Opera House begin on June 17, with Cohen
returning for Glastonbury, then for two further July dates (Edinburgh and
London). Finally, he plays the Big Chill (August 1-3). www.ticketmaster.co.uk
MY BLOODY VALENTINE
JUNE 20-JULY 3, AND BESTIVAL (SEPTEMBER 5)
We’re not holding our breath for an album, but the celebrated obsessives are
embarking on their first tour since 1992, kicking off with five nights at
the Roundhouse, NW1. www.ticketmaster.co.uk
MONKEY: JOURNEY TO THE WEST
JULY, DATES TBC
Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett’s opera spectacular, adapted and directed by
Chen Shi-Zheng, a hit at the Manchester International Festival, comes to
Covent Garden. ROH, WC2; www.royaloperahouse.org
Dance
Dance pick
DORIAN GRAY
AUGUST 22-30
Matthew Bourne updates Wilde’s dark story of innocence defiled. Beauty-boy
Dorian sends ripples through the worlds of art, celebrity and politics in
modern London – which should make a perfect springboard for Bourne’s
theatrical imagination and a seductive world premiere for the Edinburgh
International Festival. King’s Theatre, August 22-30; www.eif.co.uk
(previews at Theatre Royal, Plymouth, August 14-16)
DANCING THE WORLD 08, NEWCASTLE
UNTIL MAY 24
A festival with a smart programme of inventive companies, including DV8’s
provocative To Be Straight with You and Phoenix Dance Theatre’s Cattle Call. www.dancingtheworld.com
BAHOK
MAY 9-10 and JUNE 11-14
Akram Khan, perhaps Britain’s sharpest choreographer, explores a nomadic
contemporary world, with dancers from five countries getting lost in
translation. Brighton Festival, Friday-Saturday, and Sadler’s Wells, EC1,
June 11-14; www.akramkhancompany.net
KIROV BALLET
MAY 13-24
St Petersburg’s finest, led by Uliana Lopatkina, in Don Quixote, Balanchine’s
Jewels and a programme of treats. Touring to Salford and Birmingham; www.thelowry.com
; www.birminghamhippodrome.com
ROYAL BALLET’S DANCES AT A GATHERING/THE DREAM
MAY 17-JUNE 10
Jerome Robbins’s lyrical classic, paired with Ashton’s distillation of A
Midsummer Night’s Dream – it should be an enchanted evening. www.roh.org.uk
THE PEONY PAVILION
JUNE 3-8
The three-part Chinese opera epic (usually nine hours – this is a shortened
version) promises star-struck lovers and exquisite visuals. See one part or
all three. www.sadlerswells.com
BIRMINGHAM ROYAL BALLET’S STRAVINSKY: THE REAL DEAL
JULY 3-9
A showcase of Stravinsky: Petrushka, Card Game and Michael Corder’s new Le
Baiser de la fée in Birmingham, then Salford. www.brb.org.uk
WEST SIDE STORY
JULY 22-AUGUST 31
“I like to be in Amer-i-ca!” The Sharks and the Jets are still fighting as
Jerome Robbins’s landmark musical celebrates its 50th birthday with a
production that revives his original choreography. www.sadlerswells.com
CHINESE SWANS
JULY 28-30 and AUGUST 5-10
The Royal Opera House hosts two very different Swan Lakes: Natalia Makarova
directs the National Ballet of China; and there’s an acrobatic version in
which the heroine dances on her bloke’s head. www.roh.org.uk
STEVE REICH EVENING
AUGUST 15-17
As part of the Edinburgh International Festival, Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker’s
company, Rosas, from Belgium, perform seven exceptional pieces, to the
composer’s driving scores. www.eif.co.uk
Art
Art pick
GUSTAV KLIMT AT TATE LIVERPOOL
MAY 30-AUGUST 31
Liverpool has somehow managed to make itself European Capital of Culture this
year, so it’s definitely the place to head to. The consistently intriguing
Liverpool Biennial doesn’t open until September, but various tasty morsels
are offered before then, the main attraction being this show. Klimt is
justly famed for the startling beauty of his art, but he remains strangely
unknown in Britain – this is the first big show devoted to him. www.tate.org.uk/liverpool
THE LURE OF THE EAST
JUNE 4-AUGUST 31
Thousands of British artists headed east during the colonial era. All of them
returned home intoxicated by what they had seen. A few made art worthy of
the task. www.tate.org.uk/britain
BOUCHER AND CHARDIN
JUNE 12-SEPTEMBER 7
Boucher was a scandalous titillator, Chardin a noble and thoughtful
conscience. Extraordinary to find them in the same show. www.wallacecollection.org
PRESENT TENSE: MONA HATOUM
JUNE 13-AUGUST 8
No other artist has found as much spooky poetry in the Middle Eastern conflict
as the Beirut-born Hatoum. She’s a genius. www.parasol-unit.org
GARY HUME: DOOR PAINTINGS
JUNE 14-AUGUST 31
Before he became a painter of beautiful flowers and Kate Moss, Hume coated
doors with gorgeous enamel surfaces. They looked good in the 1980s – but
now? www.modernartoxford.org.uk
ROYAL ACADEMY SUMMER EXHIBITION
JUNE 9-AUGUST 17
Sneer if you like, but the rumbustiously maddening annual rattle bag of art
and architecture is the great-grandaddy of all art fairs. www.royalacademy.org.uk
THE COURTAULD CEZANNES
JUNE 26-OCTOBER 5
This gallery owns the finest and largest collection in Britain. Yet the whole
lot have never been on show together – until now. www.courtauld.ac.uk
HADRIAN: EMPIRE AND CONFLICT
JULY 24-OCTOBER 26
He was the gay Roman emperor with a twin genius for war and building. This
could be as big as the Terracotta Army. www.britishmuseum.org
Outdoors and about
Outdoores pick
TELECTROSCOPE: A WINDOW ACROSS THE WORLD
MAY 22-JUNE 15
Imagine a fabulous, rediscovered Victorian invention worthy of Brunel: a
tunnel beneath the Atlantic, connecting Tower Bridge and New York’s Brooklyn
Bridge, as well as a device allowing you to see one city from the other.
Funded by Artichoke, which brought us the Sultan’s Elephant, this is
ingenious, original stuff by the artist Paul St George. www.telectroscope.org
CULLODEN BATTLEFIELD VISITOR CENTRE, INVERNESS
ALL SUMMER
The evocative moorland site of the last hand-to-hand battle to take place on
British soil, in 1746 – marking the death knell of the Stuart cause – has
just opened a new exhibition building worthy of its history, by the
Glaswegian architect Gareth Hoskins. www.nts.org.uk/culloden
ST MARTIN-IN-THE-FIELDS, WC2
MAY
One of the most famous 18th-century churches in the UK has been freshly
restored and given an impressive underground extension by the architect Eric
Parry. This £36m project shows that the modern and historic can work
together. Celebratory events in May. www.stmartin-in-the-fields.org
MAYFEST 2008, BRISTOL
MAY 9-27
Now six years old, the Mayfest has moved its HQ from the comfy Bristol Old Vic
to the edgier Tobacco Factory and is staging performances in venues all over
the city. Aerial dance? Sound art? Western shootouts with fake blood
aplenty? It’s all here. www.mayfestbristol.co.uk
ROCHE COURT NEW ART CENTRE, SALISBURY: NEW GENERATION REVISITED
MAY 10-SEPTEMBER 7
A grand day out: wander the meadows and galleries of the New Art Centre and
wallow in this retrospective devoted to avant-garde British sculpture of the
1960s and 1970s, a generation taught by Anthony Caro. www.sculpture.uk.com
TATE MODERN, SE1
FROM MAY 23
Many Londoners’ favourite venue has a varied summer schedule. The gallery
highlight is a retrospective of works by the American artist Cy Twombly,
Cycles and Seasons – a lifetime’s worthof paintings, drawings and sculpture
– from June 19 to September 14. The UBS Long Weekend (May 23-26), over the
bank holiday, brings you avant-garde art, dance, photography, a gig by the
Congolese band Konono No 1 and street art outside – most of it free. www.tate.org.uk/modern
REGENT’S PARK OPEN AIR THEATRE, NW1
JUNE 2-SEPTEMBER 13
A summer institution, and a magical theatre, too, if the rain holds off. The New
Shakespeare Company gives you Romeo and Juliet, Twelfth Night, A Midsummer
Night’s Dream and a musical – Lerner and Loewe’s Gigi, starring Topol and
Millicent Martin, no less. www.openairtheatre.org
FOLKESTONE TRIENNIAL: TALES OF TIME AND SPACE
JUNE 14-SEPTEMBER 14
Folkestone, now with no ferries, is reinventing itself. Its first triennial
contemporary-art show is of public works scattered throughout the town,
including new commissions from top-drawer YBAs such as Tacita Dean and Mark
Wallinger. www.folkestonetriennial.org.uk
GREENWICH AND DOCKLANDS INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
JUNE 19-22
This is all to do with outdoor arts, from a giant Chinese landscape painting
at the O2 to a dance version of Bend It Like Beckham at Canary Wharf.
Ambitious and free. www.festival.org
LONDON FESTIVAL OF ARCHITECTURE
JUNE 20-JULY 20
An unexpected and growing success, the LFA uses the whole city as its setting.
This year, the theme is Fresh, with scores of walks, talks, exhibitions,
performances and boat trips in five main locations across the capital. www.lfa2008.org
BOOSH FEST
JULY 5
Julian Barratt and Noel Fielding, aka Howard Moon and Vince Noir, host
stand-ups and sketch performers in the UK’s first proper open-air comedy
festival. With Vince Power on board and the Boosh’s own connections, there
will be big names from the music scene to see, too. Hop Farm, Kent
FRANK GEHRY DESIGNS
THE SERPENTINE GALLERY’S SUMMER PAVILION, W2
MID-JULY-OCTOBER 19
The design of the temporary cafe/event buildings by a different international
architect every year has become a fixture of the season. This year’s
offering is by the mischievous American architect Gehry, who is having fun
as usual. This will be no mini-Bilbao Guggenheim: instead, it reprises his
early experiments in “junk architecture”, being a seemingly ad hoc assembly
of timber beams and glass. In the actual gallery, from June 26 to September
7, will be Richard Prince: Continuation, a show devoted to probably the most
inventive and heroic American artist working today. Best known for his
cowboy pictures, he has done so much else. www.serpentinegallery.org
ISAMU NOGUCHI AT THE YORKSHIRE SCULPTURE PARK
FROM JULY 18
Now with fine indoor galleries as well as the great outdoors, the YSP is at
the top of its considerable game with this show of works by the
multi-talented 20th-century Japanese-American sculptor, focusing on his
monumental stone pieces. West Bretton, Wakefield; www.ysp.co.uk
NEW SAATCHI GALLERY, CHELSEA
JULY, DATES TBC
The third – and biggest yet – iteration of this hugely influential gallery
will open with a show of new Chinese artists when Mr Saatchi is good and
ready, sometime this summer. After the disappointment of its County Hall
phase, we’re hoping for much better things in the former Duke of York’s
headquarters. www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk
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