Every October, London's Regent's Park transforms into a mecca for Art lovers with the Frieze Art Fair, one of the world's top contemporary art events and the perfect place to punch a fall clock! ✨
🎨 Punch in the guide:
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Full of artistic atmosphere: When you walk into the exhibition area, you will be surrounded by a dazzling array of contemporary art works! Galleries, sculptures, installation art, etc. from all over the world make you dizzying, and every shot is a high-quality art blockbuster. 📸
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Open-air Sculpture Park: In addition to indoor exhibitions, don't forget to visit the Frieze Sculpture Park! The autumn sun shines on the open-air art works in Regent's Park, and there are beautiful punch points everywhere! 🍁
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Fashion autumn wear: In this art feast, of course, it is indispensable to use a set of autumn art full of wear to blend in! Trench coats, berets, vintage plaid, with earth tones, and the atmosphere of the exhibition scene perfectly. 🍂 👗
Selected by Flo London as one of the best art exhibitions to see during Frieze London, "Mary Mary" has finally opened!!
The once-neglected half-acre site at the Artists' Garden in central London, on top of Temple Tube station, has become the world's first sculpture garden dedicated to the work of female artists.
The exhibition exhibited BaoRong Rong Bao mew: ahaha ha ha ha ha ha ha, that is, I have a little 😙 😚 😙 😚 😙, Candida Powell - Williams and Alice Wilson commissioned work, Lucy Gregory and L R Vandy adapted works, And existing works by Olivia Bax, Frances Richardson, Holly Stevenson and Virginia Overton.
Among them, Bao Rong's Yellow Path, a 5-meter-by-5-meter "infinite path," was inspired by the yellow paving stones used to guide the visually impaired through the city, which are often blocked by brick walls or dead ends as new developments spring up.
Bao's "Yellow Path" criticizes the urbanist disregard for the visually impaired and invites people to experience the sculpture through touch and sound. Composed of yellow brush squares, the work contains a Braille poem, a response to the work and the garden by a visually impaired poet. The Yellow Trail is supported by the British Council's "Connections Through Culture" funding programme.
The exhibition is free and open to all! Every day at 8am until nightfall and sunset in London! Welcome to play!
Address is as follows:
MARY MARY
Artist’s Garden, Temple Place, London WC2R 2PH
3 October 2024 – September 2025
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