Something for the weekend: Time Out London listings

Guys, check out Time Out’s tickets and offers in London here. As always, there’s a packed week, and weekend, ahead. Why not submit a 200-word review of something exciting you’ve done in London for London Life?
Something for the weekend: Tate Modern

It’s your last chance to see Tate Britain’s Watercolour, closing in 17 days. From maps, manuscripts, miniatures and to landscapes bursting with visual splendour, this exhibition cannot be missed. ‘breathes new life into a medium’ - The Telegraph Plus, OPEN CALL for artists at Tate Modern. Artist Kateřina Šedá is looking for 80 amateur and professional artists for a performance on Saturday 3 September.
> Book online
> Find out more
> Find out more
Something for the weekend: Late at Tate
Hey London Life followers, did you know that on the first Friday of each month (i.e. NEXT Friday!), the Tate Britain opens late, and from personal experience I can tell you it’s the perfect way to wind down after a week’s work.
So next Friday 3rd June, from 6-10pm (for FREE) there’s an exhibition put on by young Londoners. I’ll probably be there so do let me know if you will be too!
Something for the weekend:
Watercolour at Tate Britain
Watercolour at Tate Britain invites you to challenge your preconceptions of what watercolour is. The most ambitious exhibition about watercolour ever to be staged, with works spanning 800 years, this boundary-breaking survey celebrates the full variety of ways watercolour has been used. From manuscripts, miniatures and maps through to works showing the expressive visual splendour of foreign landscapes, watercolour has always played a part in British Art.
Something for the weekend:
Kinetica Art Fair
A futuristic zoo, an interactive sphere and a man with an ear growing out of his arm are all featured in the 2011 Kinetica Art Fair.
Now in its third year, Kinetica claims to be the UK’s only art fair dedicated to robotic, new media, electronic, sound, light and time-based art.
This year’s exhibition explores the evolution of the human body, brain, mind and consciousness.
If you are looking for something interesting to do this weekend, then why not visit this exhibition in central London to see some of the innovative and eccentric artworks on show.
Something for the weekend:
Southbank Centre
Southbank Centre’s wide-ranging programme: classical and world music, rock and pop, jazz, dance, literature and the visual arts - attracts the most diverse audience of any UK venue.
Southbank Centre consists of the Royal Festival Hall (reopened after its two-year transformation), the Hayward Gallery, Queen Elizabeth Hall (containing the Purcell Room), and the Saison Poetry Library. We also manage the Arts Council Collection and organises the National Touring Exhibition programme in venues throughout the UK.
Situated on the south bank of the River Thames next to the popular London Eye, Southbank Centre is at the heart of an arts quarter stretching from the Royal National Theatre and National Film Theatre to the Tate Modern and Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre.


