Can creativity, innovation and imagination thrive under lockdown? We exist in a world limited by our own thinking, says Science Gallery’s Young Leader Aless.
Read MoreScience Gallery Mediator Merle Nunneley embraces mess and gets hands on with a creative look at arts and craft practices you can explore at home
Read MoreScience Gallery Mediator Clare Green explores how attitudes towards climate breakdown have changed since the coronavirus pandemic
Read MoreAs part of a new series reflecting back to the ON EDGE exhibition, our Mediators talk about how they are managing anxiety during lockdown.
Read MoreArtist Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley shares how and why they used gaming to create an archive that centres Black Trans experiences.
Read MoreFollowing the UK government recommendation that people avoid social venues, the Science Gallery London building closed at 6pm on the 16th of March (including our gallery, café, shop and hire venues) until further notice.
Read MoreScience Gallery London’s Katie Barron speaks to designers Ben Templeton and Bene Webb from Thought Den about the process of creating the kaleidoscopic creative identity for GENDERS: Shaping and Breaking the Binary.
Read MoreYes you can, according to findings from a live experiment run by our team from the Cicely Saunders Institute of Palliative Care, Policy & Rehabilitation at King's College London during the ON EDGE: Living in an Age of Anxiety season.
Read MoreExtended until the end of January, we had extra time with the Gallery’s first exhibition and events season, HOOKED, exploring addiction and recovery…
Read MoreLOOKING BACK ON 2019
Read MoreIt may not be obvious on a first visit to Science Gallery London, but the building originally dates from the early 18th century when it was part of the original Guy’s Hospital. The east wing of the hospital, where the Gallery is now situated, was bombed in the Second World War and reconstructed in the late 60s.Last night, the work undertaken to transform this building...
Read MoreIn spring 2020 Science Gallery London will explore personal perspectives on gender today through the lenses of art and science in a new exhibition and events season.
Read MoreConsider Falling is one of the first pieces greeting visitors to ON EDGE: Living in an Age of Anxiety. Rooted in research about depersonalisation disorders (DPD) and interviews with service users at King's College London's Depersonalisation Research Unit, artist Sarah Howe has created an immersive environment of mirrors, fragments of interviews, and repeated gestures of anxiety.
Read MoreDuring our DARK MATTER season in 2019, Young Leader Laura-Joy Pieters was inspired by Vera Rubin, the first scientist to discover dark matter.
Read MoreI chucked buckets of paint, glitter and washing up liquid over 7 people. It was all for art… and science.
Read MoreFrom making lava in Guy’s Courtyard, to keeping skin cells alive in an incubator powered by bees, it’s been a busy first year at Science Gallery London!
Read MoreAged 15-25 and want to build your skills, experience and confidence in a unique cultural venue in the heart of London?
Read MoreSome of the most powerful work is made by people whose voices are less present in the mainstream. The first group of Science Gallery London Young Leaders are eight young people who represent the incredible talent and diversity of our city…
Read MoreBy Mohyuddin Patel, Mediator during the DARK MATTER season
Read MoreWe all experience anxiety to some extent during our lives and from 19 September, our new exhibition and events season, ON EDGE: Living in an Age of Anxiety, will explore creative and positive responses to our anxious times.
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