November feels like the moment the art world catches its breath. New shows open, collectors start looking ahead to winter, and London’s galleries take on a more reflective energy. Here are three exhibitions we are genuinely looking forward to visiting over the next few weeks.
1. Small is Beautiful at Flowers Gallery, Cork Street
21 November 2025 to 10 January 2026
Now in its forty third year, this renowned exhibition celebrates art on an intimate scale. Each edition brings together small format works by artists from different generations, and it is always one of the most uplifting shows of the season.
We have long admired how Flowers Gallery supports painters who work with care and precision. The focus on detail, composition, and the joy of small scale makes Small is Beautiful feel especially close to home for us. Many of the works we love, and that our collectors respond to, share that same sense of thoughtfulness in a modest frame.
(Source: Flowers Gallery announcement, 2025.)
2. Turner and Constable at Tate Britain
27 November 2025 to 12 April 2026
Few exhibitions promise quite as much atmosphere as this one. Both Turner and Constable captured the shifting light and drama of the British landscape in ways that still feel alive today.
For us, this show will be a reminder of why landscape painting endures. The movement of weather, the shimmer of water, and the golden haze that turns familiar scenes into something extraordinary are exactly what we look for in our own collection. We are eager to see how Tate Britain brings these two masters into conversation.
(Source: Tate Britain exhibition listing, 2025.)
3. Colour and Emotion: Design Through the Decades at the V&A
Opens December 2025
This upcoming exhibition explores how colour shapes mood and design from the 1920s to the present day. It offers a rich look at how palette, pattern, and material can change the way we experience space and feeling.
We are always interested in how artists and designers use colour to express emotion. It connects interiors, paintings, and collections in a way that feels universal. The V and A has a gift for storytelling through visual culture, and this sounds like one that will stay with us.
(Source: V&A Museum preview, 2025.)
There is so much to look forward to as winter begins, and these exhibitions feel like the perfect way to spend a cold afternoon in the city. We cannot wait to visit these exhibitions and experience them for ourselves and would love to hear what you think if you go.


