
Inflorescence
Until Jul 26
New flower-inspired works from artists featured in the 2025 Flowers exhibition
Chelsea, London 🇬🇧
One of London's most visited contemporary art galleries, the Saatchi Gallery occupies a grand former military building in Chelsea with a series of large, flexible gallery spaces. Founded by advertising mogul Charles Saatchi, it played a pivotal role in launching the Young British Artists movement in the 1990s, bringing artists including Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin to international attention. Entry to most exhibitions is free.
Explore 3 exhibitions on now and 0 coming soon at Saatchi Gallery.

Until Jul 26
New flower-inspired works from artists featured in the 2025 Flowers exhibition

Until Aug 2
Annual juried show of botanical art and photography from global artists

Until Sep 8
200+ artists respond to the sun and moon, from ancient myth to space exploration
Chelsea, London·View on artmap
Sunday10am–6pm
Monday10am–6pm
Tuesday10am–6pm
Wednesday10am–6pm
Thursday10am–6pm
Friday10am–6pm
Saturday10am–6pm
EndedEnded May 10
15+ artists reimagine the boundaries and possibilities of contemporary textile art
EndedEnded May 6
Moncrief and Neeb deconstruct meaning and materiality through irony
EndedEnded May 6
British-Malaysian-Chinese artist explores femininity, appetite and female desire
EndedEnded May 6
Anna Liber Lewis breaks from grid-based work into embodied, risky abstraction
EndedEnded Apr 26
Saatchi's 40th anniversary group show, culminating with Richard Wilson's 20:50
"‘Fun’ is a quality which seems to be all too frequently forgotten by curatorial teams. But it certainly takes pride of place at the Saatchi Gallery’s The Long Now, an expansive, nine- room retrospective which aims to both celebrate its past and reiterate its commitment to championing innovation in the present and future."
EndedEnded Apr 6
Four artists navigate the erotic charge and dream logic of interior life
EndedEnded Mar 30
Six RCA and Slade graduates paint fluid, unruly figures of body and self
EndedEnded Mar 23
Eight artists excavate memory held in the objects and gestures of daily life