Saatchi Gallery Museum
Saatchi Gallery Museum
Since 1985, the Saatchi Gallery has featured contemporary art exhibitions showing the work of emerging artists. The exhibitions that have drawn on the collection of Charles Saatchi have led the Saatchi Gallery to become a recognized authority in contemporary art globally. The Gallery has acquired a solid reputation for introducing artists who would later gain worldwide recognition. In 2019 the Saatchi Gallery became a registered charity and started a new chapter in its history.
Saatchi Gallery exists as a registered charity to provide an innovative platform for contemporary art and culture. We are committed to supporting artists and making contemporary art accessible to all. We strive to present projects in physical and digital spaces that are engaging, enlightening and educational for a diverse audience.
The Saatchi Gallery seeks to collaborate with artists in an open and honest way with the main goal of presenting their work to a wider audience.
The Gallery presents curated exhibitions on relevant and exciting themes in the context of contemporary creative culture. Our educational programs aim to reveal the possibilities of artistic expression to young minds, encourage new thoughts and stimulate innovation.
As a charity, the organization seeks to finance itself and reinvests all income in its core activities to support access to contemporary art for all.
The Saatchi Gallery in London is registered as a charity under registration number 1182328 and its registered office is located in the Duke of York headquarters, King’s Road, London, SW3 4RY, United Kingdom.
Saatchi Gallery is delighted to present JR: Chronicles – the largest solo exhibition in a museum to date by internationally recognized French artist JR, featuring some of his most iconic projects of the past fifteen years. Curated by Sharon Matt Atkins and Drew Sawyer of the Brooklyn Museum, JR: Chronicles traces JR’s career from his first documentation of the graffiti artist as a teenager in Paris to his large-scale architectural interventions in cities around the world and recent digital murals collages that create collective portraits of different communities.