If you are in London this summer, the city has a lot to offer. The current exhibition scene is especially strong because you can move from a major museum show to a smaller contemporary gallery exhibition without changing the rhythm of your day.artsy+2
One of the most interesting long-running shows is Audrey Amiss: The Surviving Exhibitions at the Wellcome Collection, on view until 7 February 2027. If you like exhibitions that feel thoughtful, layered, and a little unexpected, this is one worth keeping on your list.artrabbit
Another strong pick is Rudy Loewe: Intimacies of Care – Spaces of Grief and Possibility, also at the Wellcome Collection and also running until 7 February 2027. It is the kind of exhibition that slows you down a little and gives you something more reflective than a quick visual hit.artrabbit
If you want something more contemporary and gallery-focused, Jasper Marsalis at Chisenhale Gallery runs until 6 September 2026. That makes it a good summer exhibition if you are building a day around London’s east-side gallery scene.artrabbit
Another short-run highlight is Pool Diaries at Rhodes Contemporary Art, which ends on 1 August 2026. If you are visiting soon, this is the kind of exhibition you should try to catch before it disappears from the calendar.artrabbit
What makes London exciting right now is the mix. You do not have to choose between museums and galleries because the city gives you both, along with smaller shows and short-lived projects that keep the season feeling fresh.artsy+2
If you are planning a blog post or a visit, the best way to approach London this summer is to think in layers: one major exhibition, one gallery stop, and one smaller discovery. That way, the city feels less like a checklist and more like an art day that unfolds naturally.artsy+1
London is especially good when you want variety, pace, and the feeling that something is always happening somewhere. This summer, that energy is very much alive in the exhibition scene.exhibitionary+1