Filtering by: Fringe Event
Exhibition: Absence
Jun
6
to Jul 11

Exhibition: Absence

  • Stable Gallery St Georges Hall St George’s Place Liverpool L1 1JJ (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

© Image: Paweł Starzec – Heliodrom, Mostar, 2017, from Makeshift series

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

Open Eye Gallery: Absence Exhibition

Absence, curated by sociologists Laura Harris and Maike Pötschulat, is a new group exhibition that brings together the photography of seven visual sociologists, alongside finalists from an open call for photography of absences in the Liverpool City Region. 

Taking place from 5 June 2026 to 11 July 2026 at Liverpool’s Stable Gallery, St George’s Hall, the show explores absence as both a social reality and a visual language. Across more than 100 photographs, the show investigates absence’s many forms, asking: What does it mean to document what is no longer there, or those who are no longer present? How can we see what society leaves behind, or what never came to be? How can we photograph what resists to be shown? 

Maike Pötschulat, one of the exhibition’s curators, said:

Absence is not emptiness. Often, what appears to be absent can have a large footprint in our lives and societies while generating a whole host of activities. In this exhibition, we wanted to focus on the ways in which absence is lived, felt and practised to show what materialises in the gaps and voids that are left by an absence.’ 

The exhibition includes:

  • Terence Heng’s photography of Bukit Brown Cemetery, a Chinese diaspora graveyard in Singapore, exploring death, one of the most evocative forms of absence. Heng’s work highlights how loss is a fertile ground for collective beliefs and practices.  

  • A selection of Setareh Kazemi’s photojournalistic work in Iran, with a focus on the lives of women and migrant communities who rarely find representation. Her work is a reminder of the power of photography to make visible experiences and people that are frequently overlooked. 

  • Manal Massalha’s Standing Tall series, which documents Palestinian life and hardship in the Occupied Territories in the West Bank. Here, absence is not a noun but a verb, where a process of violent ‘absenting’ is inflicted on Palestinian communities and lands.

  • An extract of David Schalliol’s Isolated Building Studies, selected from a portfolio of over 700 images. As a broader commentary on urban and social change in Chicago, these images feature stand-alone buildings that are the last, or first, remnants of physical and social neighbourhoods. 

  • Makeshift, in which Paweł Starzec revisits sites of the Bosnian War with the muted pastel aesthetic of his photography in stark contrast to the atrocities that happened in the photographed places. Starzec’s work is a critical commentary on the way power manipulates what and who is remembered. 

  • Gesche Würfel’s The Absence and Presence of The Berlin Wall, a comprehensive research project that speaks to the traces of the wall in material and psychic terms. We exhibit composite images that were created on Würfel’s cycle along the 160km Berlin Wall Trail.  

  • Five polaroids, all of which for unknown reasons shed their owners and now exist alongside the 4000 images in Kyler Zeleny’s Found Polaroid archive. While their original context is forever lost, the displayed polaroids feature flash fiction that was written to reanimate them. 

  • Running alongside the exhibition are the submissions from an Open Call for photography of absence in the Liverpool City Region, which generated hundreds of images that highlight how absence is woven into the built and social fabric of the area. Five finalists, whose work is exhibited, are: 

  • Daniel Frost

  • Alishah Iqbal

  • Paradise Made

  • Dan Murphy

  • Claire Weetman

TILT special edition

An accompanying special issue of Open Eye Gallery’s magazine, TILT, will launch at the opening of the exhibition. The magazine features specially commissioned texts on the theme of absence and an expanded selection of images from every photographer’s project. TILT will be available online for free at Open Eye Gallery’s website, or in print from their bookshop (£5). The magazine will also feature images received through the open call by:

  • Ellie Byrne

  • Angela Cheveau

  • Alan Colclough

  • Emily Gerrard

  • Jean Kane

  • Nicolas Kendall

  • June Poston

  • Andrew Stewart

  • Andrew Wilson

Public events programme

Funded by the British Academy’s BA/Leverhulme Small Research Grants Programme and Liverpool John Moores University’s FSC Research Development Fund, the exhibition also includes a series of public events. There will be several opportunities to see the exhibition together with the photographers, curators and organisers for the launch weekend which includes the following activities:

Address

Stable Gallery
St Georges Hall
St George’s Place
Liverpool L1 1JJ

6th June - 11th July, 9am – 4.30pm

Event Partners

The British Academy, Liverpool John Moores University, Open Eye Gallery, Stable Gallery, University of Southampton. 

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Exhibition: Roaming Britain
Jun
18
to Sep 6

Exhibition: Roaming Britain

© Image: RIBA

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

Gain new perspectives on the inventive ways Gypsy and Traveller communities create and inhabit their homes. From tents and wagons to bricks and mortar, this display challenges widespread misconceptions and highlights the discrimination these communities continue to face. Led by community voices, it invites you to reflect on the creativity, ingenuity, and resilience involved in making and sustaining these homes.

This display features a new series of commissioned photographs by Romani artist Corrina Eastwood, capturing the original use and adaptation of materials by her family and wider community.

You’ll also see a large-scale drawing or ‘dialectogram’ of a Showman’s yard by Mitch Miller; an artwork by Irish Traveller architect Darren Ward; portraits and poems by Sheldon Chadwick, a seventh-generation Showman; a collaborative project with Charmaine Abdul Karim, founder of 'Pride of Romany', exploring stopping places through a case study of Sound Common; and an artwork by Boater artist and educator Lil Adams, created through her distinctive ‘drawing with stitches’ technique.

18 June to 6 September 2026

Gallery 2, RIBA North, 21 Mann Island, Liverpool, L3 1BP

Monday to Sunday, including bank holidays: 10am to 5.50pm

Free

Event Partners

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Exhibition: LSA Degree Show 2026 PV
Jun
18
6:00 PM18:00

Exhibition: LSA Degree Show 2026 PV

  • 25 Abercromby Square, Liverpool L69 7ZN (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

© Image: LSA

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

LSA Degree Show 2026 Private View

Every year the Liverpool School of Architecture showcases the work of it's graduating BA3 and MArch 5 cohorts, both as a physical exhibition and as an online gallery.

This year the End of Year Showcase will take place for the first time in their new building.

Further details will be released soon, for any queries please contact lsaevent@liverpool.ac.uk.

Professor Ola Uduku, Head of School, and the staff and students of the Liverpool School of Architecture are proud to invite you to the LSA summer degree show of 2026, titled "Work Revealed".

WORK REVEALED

LSA Summer Degree Show 2026 Prizegiving and Private View

Prizegiving: Thursday 18 June 2 – 4pm

Private viewing: Thursday 18 June 6 – 9pm

Public: Friday 19 June to Tuesday 14 July from 9am – 5pm (excluding weekends).

Free

 

Please enter through the main entrance to the new extension (opposite the Sports Hall)

For further information or to inform us of any specific access requirements contact lsaevent@liverpool.ac.uk

Please note that there will be filming and photography at both events.

 

Liverpool School of Architecture
1 Bedford Street North

Liverpool
L69 7ZN

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Exhibition: LSA Degree Show 2026
Jun
19
9:00 AM09:00

Exhibition: LSA Degree Show 2026

  • 25 Abercromby Square, Liverpool L69 7ZN (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

© Image: LSA

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

LSA Degree Show 2026

Every year the Liverpool School of Architecture showcases the work of it's graduating BA3 and MArch 5 cohorts, both as a physical exhibition and as an online gallery.

This year the End of Year Showcase will take place for the first time in their new building.

From Friday 19th June - Open to the public, weekdays 9-5pm

Free

Further details will be released soon, for any queries please contact lsaevent@liverpool.ac.uk.

Event Partner

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Open Day: Hilbre Island
Jun
13
1:30 PM13:30

Open Day: Hilbre Island

© Image: Friends of Hilbre Island

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

Open Day Event,

Saturday 13th June, 13:30 - 16:30

Hilbre Island, Wirral, CH47 1HZ

Free

The Hilbre Islands Local Nature Reserve is contained within the Dee Estuary on the north west coast of England. The Dee Estuary is a Site of Special Scientific Interest, a Special Protection Area, a Ramsar Site which is a Wetland of International Importance and a candidate EU Special Area of Conservation. The three tidal islands, Little Eye, Middle Eye and Hilbre Island and the surrounding foreshores, are freehold property managed by the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral supported by the Friends of Hilbre.

https://www.hilbreisland.info/

Check the tide times for the day you wish to visit.

It is safe to cross from West Kirby 3 hours after high tide.

You must leave the island at least 3 hours before the next high tide.

It takes around 1 hour to walk from the marine lake to the main island. Check the notice board on the slipway.

WALK FROM THE MARINE LAKE SLIPWAY TO THE LITTLE ISLAND AND THEN ONTO THE MAIN ISLANDS.

Do not attempt to cross from Hoylake as there is a deep muddy channel blocking your crossing

Facilities: There are no shops or fresh water on the islands, and very little shelter.

There are 2 very basic compositing toilets on the island.

Toilets are available at Dee Lane slipway 10am – 6pm in the summer months.

Clothing: Always carry waterproofs, and warm clothing, and food and hot drinks in winter.

Footwear: Wear sensible footwear as rocks, barnacles etc can cause injury.

Overnight stays: are not allowed.

Please help Protect the Wildlife:

All plants and animals in the Local Nature Reserve are protected.

Please do not collect any living creatures, pick or damage the plants.

Please avoid disturbing the roosting birds in winter.

Please keep to the paths or rocks to avoid trampling plants or eroding soil.

Please take your litter home with you.

Fires are not allowed on the Islands, if you see a fire please dial 999.

Dogs must be kept on a lead at all times on the islands which are a Local Nature Reserve

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Event: Town Hall Time Machine
Jun
13
1:30 PM13:30

Event: Town Hall Time Machine

© Image: MAKE


Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.


Town Hall Time Machine

A creative community session exploring the past, present, and future of Birkenhead Town Hall.

Join us for a creative community session exploring the past, present, and future of Birkenhead Town Hall.

Through zines, collage, and shared ideas, we’ll imagine what this space could become — together.

If you care about the future of this building and want to help shape what comes next, we’d love you to be part of it.



Please purchase tickets through the event organiser’s website, via ticket button above.

Date:

13th June 2026, 13:30-16:30



Birkenhead – venue tbc



Free

——————————————————————————————————

Hosted by Make CIC, delivered by PLACED and funded by the Architectural Heritage Fund



Event Partners

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Cycle Tour: Tour De Docks
Jun
13
10:00 AM10:00

Cycle Tour: Tour De Docks

  • Sitting Bull Statue Aigburth, England (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

© Image: LAS


Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.


Architecture of Wellbeing Tour De Docks Bike Ride

An event to get outside for the morning and see Liverpool from your bike. A 14 mile overall route with a stop half way.

Please purchase tickets through the event organiser’s website, via ticket button above.


Date:

13th June 2026, 10:00-13:00


Starting Location

Sitting Bull StatueAigburth, England


Ticketed, £5


Frequently asked questions

Do I need my own bike?

Yes, please bring your own bike and helmet and any other equipment. There are local bike hire companies in the city.

Do I need a helmet?

Yes, you are attending this event at your own risk.

Can families attend?

Yes everyone is welcome. We ask that under 18s are accompanied with a parent or legal guardian.

Will there be stops?

The route is from Otterspool Promenade down through to Albert Dock where we will pick up the bike paths in front of the three graces and down towards Bramley Moore Dock. We will stop within the Ten Streets area for a drink and a rest before returning to Otterspool Promenade.

How Long is the bike ride?

The route in total is around 14 miles. 7 miles to Bramley Moore Dock and 7 miles back. This may take between 35minutes


Event Partner

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Event: St Helens Heritage Festival
May
30
10:00 AM10:00

Event: St Helens Heritage Festival

  • St Helens Town Hall, Victoria Square, Saint Helens WA10 1HP (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

© Image: St Helens Heritage Festival

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

St Helens Heritage Festival

St Helens Heritage Festival will return on Saturday 30th May 2026, 10:00 - 15:00 at St Helens Town Hall. Join St Helens Council’s Archive Service for a free family-friendly celebration of the borough’s rich history. Taking place in St Helens Town Hall, the hugely popular free, family-friendly event will celebrate the varied and interesting heritage of the borough with stalls, craft workshops, performances, tours, displays and more besides.

Event Details

Saturday 30th May, 10:00 - 15:00

Exhibition, 10:00 - 15:00

Talk (150 Years of St Helens Town Hall), 13:00 - 13:45

+ other events, refer to website

St Helens Town Hall, Victoria Square, Saint Helens WA10 1HP

Free

Event Partner

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Open Day: Hilbre Island
May
23
10:30 AM10:30

Open Day: Hilbre Island

© Image: Friends of Hilbre Island

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

Open Day Event

Saturday 23rd May, 10:30 - 14:30

Hilbre Island, Wirral, CH47 1HZ

Free

The Hilbre Islands Local Nature Reserve is contained within the Dee Estuary on the north west coast of England. The Dee Estuary is a Site of Special Scientific Interest, a Special Protection Area, a Ramsar Site which is a Wetland of International Importance and a candidate EU Special Area of Conservation. The three tidal islands, Little Eye, Middle Eye and Hilbre Island and the surrounding foreshores, are freehold property managed by the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral supported by the Friends of Hilbre.

https://www.hilbreisland.info/

Check the tide times for the day you wish to visit.

It is safe to cross from West Kirby 3 hours after high tide.

You must leave the island at least 3 hours before the next high tide.

It takes around 1 hour to walk from the marine lake to the main island. Check the notice board on the slipway.

WALK FROM THE MARINE LAKE SLIPWAY TO THE LITTLE ISLAND AND THEN ONTO THE MAIN ISLANDS.

Do not attempt to cross from Hoylake as there is a deep muddy channel blocking your crossing

Facilities: There are no shops or fresh water on the islands, and very little shelter.

There are 2 very basic compositing toilets on the island.

Toilets are available at Dee Lane slipway 10am – 6pm in the summer months.

Clothing: Always carry waterproofs, and warm clothing, and food and hot drinks in winter.

Footwear: Wear sensible footwear as rocks, barnacles etc can cause injury.

Overnight stays: are not allowed.

Please help Protect the Wildlife:

All plants and animals in the Local Nature Reserve are protected.

Please do not collect any living creatures, pick or damage the plants.

Please avoid disturbing the roosting birds in winter.

Please keep to the paths or rocks to avoid trampling plants or eroding soil.

Please take your litter home with you.

Fires are not allowed on the Islands, if you see a fire please dial 999.

Dogs must be kept on a lead at all times on the islands which are a Local Nature Reserve

View Event →
Exhibition: LJMU Degree Show
May
22
to Jun 6

Exhibition: LJMU Degree Show

  • John Lennon Art and Design Building, 2 Duckinfield Street Liverpool, England, L3 5RD United Kingdom (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

© Image: LJMU

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

LJMU School of Art and Creative Industries Degree Show 2026

Please join LJMU to celebrate the work of the 2026 graduates. across the creative disciplines of:

BAH Architecture

MArch Architecture

BAH Interior Architecture

BAH Fashion Design & Communication

BAH Film Studies

BAH Fine Art

BAH Graphic Design & Illustration

BAH History of Art & Museum Studies

Private View: Thursday 21st May 2026, 17:00 - 19:00

Public Opening Times: 22nd May - 5th June 2026, 10:00 - 16:00 (closed Sundays and Bank Holidays)

Free

For further details, visit LJMU’s website.

John Lennon Art and Design Building, 2 Duckinfield Street, Liverpool, L3 5RD

Event Partner

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Talk: Níall McLaughlin
May
21
6:30 PM18:30

Talk: Níall McLaughlin

© Image: RIBA

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

RIBA X University of Liverpool: Materials, Meaning, and the Sacred - Níall McLaughlin in Conversation

Join RIBA for a keynote lecture with award-winning architect Níall McLaughlin, as they share the ideas, commitment to care, and the sense of wonder that drives their approach to architecture.

Please purchase tickets through the event organiser’s website, via ticket button above.

About the Event

This year, Níall has been awarded the prestigious Royal Gold Medal in recognition of their lifetime contribution to architecture. As part of the celebrations, we are presenting a new exhibition, Immersion, at RIBA North. The exhibition features a specially commissioned installation responding to the practice’s recently awarded project: the Museum of Jesus’ Baptism in Jordan. Next to a UNESCO‑designated site, the design draws on Jordan’s local building traditions and materials including rammed earth and stone. The crafted model at RIBA North captures the museum project’s architectural vision, its sacred narratives, and rich landscape. It is accompanied by a new film exploring how Níall’s practice challenges conventional notions of architecture.

In this lecture, Níall will share insights from the exhibition alongside related projects from across his career. They will reflect on their path into working with heritage and sacred sites, and on how contemporary architecture can hold and carry histories, meaning, and memory forward in remarkable ways.



Who is this event for?

This event for anyone interested in architecture, memory, cultural projects, and heritage sites. It forms part of our public programmes, bringing conversations about architecture and the built environment to all.

This event is delivered in partnership with the Centre for Architecture and Visual Arts, University of Liverpool



Event Format

The event will be opened by Dr Marco Iuliano, Research Director, Centre for Architecture and Visual Art. Dr Iuliano will introduce the lecture and RIBA's ongoing partnership with the Centre for Architecture and Visual Arts, including our longstanding collaboration for the Colin Rowe Lecture series.

Níall will then deliver the keynote lecture, before being joined in conversation by Professor Soumyen Bandyopadhyay, Sir James Stirling Chair in Architecture at the Liverpool School of Architecture.

You’ll then have a chance to ask your questions during an audience question and answer session. After this, stay for a drink and further conversation downstairs in the Waterhouse Cafe, Victoria Gallery and Museum.



Event Details

Doors open at 6.00pm for a 6.30pm start

  • a bar will be available after the talk, offering alcoholic and non-alcoholic drink options. Please note, Victoria Gallery and Museum operates a Challenge 25 policy

  • we offer concession tickets for students, those on lower incomes, those with disabilities, and those over 65. Please choose the 'Concession' ticket at the checkout

  • we aim to make our events open and accessible to all. If cost is a barrier, we offer an additional discounted option via a discount code. Please contact talks@riba.org in confidence for the code

  • by accepting an invitation or purchasing a ticket you have consented to being photographed, filmed or recorded as a visitor attending the event for all general purposes in relation to the event including without limitation, publicity and promotional purposes. You consent to us using your voice, name and/or likeness, without compensation, for exploitation in promotional and publicity materials, online, books, newspapers, newsletters, magazine articles and social marketing whenever we choose to do so, in perpetuity



Venue Accessibility and Travel Information

  • there is step-free access to the building. Inside, you can access the Leggate theatre via lift or stairs

  • you can find more information about the Victoria Gallery and Museum on the AccessAble guide

  • the Victoria Gallery and Museum is at the top of Brownlow Hill, a 15 minute walk from Lime Street and Liverpool Central rail stations

  • you can also reach Victoria Gallery and Museum by bus. From the city centre, buses 14 and 79 go up Brownlow Hill around every 5 minutes. The buses leave from the side of the Adelphi Hotel at the bottom of Brownlow Hill and stop outside the Victoria Gallery and Museum at the top of Brownlow Hill

  • there is no on-site parking. Nearby Pay and Display car parks include the University of Liverpool Visitor car park on Mount Pleasant, 200m away from the Museum

  • British Sign Language (BSL) interpretation can be provided throughout the event. For BSL priority seating, please select the 'BSL Seating' add-on at the checkout. Please note this ticketing will close three weeks in advance due to Interpreter availability

  • if you would like to discuss your attendance and inclusion and/or access needs to attend the event comfortably, please contact talks@riba.org


Event Partners

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Exhibition: LJMU Degree Show PV
May
21
5:00 PM17:00

Exhibition: LJMU Degree Show PV

  • John Lennon Art and Design Building, 2 Duckinfield Street Liverpool, England, L3 5RD United Kingdom (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

© Image: LJMU

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

LJMU School of Art and Creative Industries Degree Show 2026 Private View

Please join LJMU to celebrate the work of the 2026 graduates. across the creative disciplines of:

BAH Architecture

MArch Architecture

BAH Interior Architecture

BAH Fashion Design & Communication

BAH Film Studies

BAH Fine Art

BAH Graphic Design & Illustration

BAH History of Art & Museum Studies

Private View: Thursday 21st May 2026, 17:00 - 19:00

Public Opening Times: 22nd May - 5th June 2026, 10:00 - 16:00 (closed Sundays and Bank Holidays)

Free

For further details, visit LJMU’s website.

John Lennon Art and Design Building, 2 Duckinfield Street, Liverpool, L3 5RD

Event Partner

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Exhibition: Níall McLaughlin
Apr
25
to Jun 7

Exhibition: Níall McLaughlin

© Image: Pete Carr Photo

Note: This event is organised by a third party. Liverpool Architecture Foundation CIC acts solely as a promotional partner and has no responsibility for the organisation, delivery, or management of the event. All liability relating to the event, including but not limited to public liability insurance, health and safety, and event operations, rests entirely with the event organiser.

RIBA: Royal Gold Medal Exhibition - Níall McLaughlin

Now open at RIBA North, this free exhibition celebrates the 2026 Royal Gold Medallist, Níall McLaughlin - Architect, Educator and Writer.

This specially commissioned installation, Immersion, celebrates Níall McLaughlin, recipient of the 2026 Royal Gold Medal for Architecture.

At it's centre is a highly crafted model of The Museum of Jesus’ Baptism, a major recent international commission. Due for completion in 2030, the museum will create a new gateway for visitors and pilgrims at Bethany Beyond the Jordan, the historic site traditionally recognised as the place of Christ’s baptism.

Created especially for this exhibition, the large-scale model was designed and built by Níall McLaughlin Architects during an intensive month-long process in their London studio. Developed through a process of close collaboration, testing, and refinement, it reflects the same care and rigour in the practice’s buildings. Materials were trialled and carefully adjusted to capture the museum’s rich earthen palette, while construction techniques were tested to achieve precision, texture, and atmosphere.

Now reconstructed for the exhibition, the model is more than a representation of the building. It is a design object in its own right; a tool for exploring ideas, and a way of revealing how the museum will emerge from the landscape to welcome visitors through its sequence of spaces, shaped by shadow, light, and movement as they descend through the landscape. 

The model is accompanied by a film revealing the inspiration and principles behind the building’s remarkable design. 

Immersion invites visitors to explore how architecture can respond to landscape, history, and faith, with imagination and care.

About Níall McLaughlin

With more than 30 years in practice, McLaughlin is an architect, educator, and writer, recognised as a pivotal figure in contemporary architecture. His work is defined by a deep sensitivity to place, material, craft, light, and form.

Find out more about Níall McLaughlin Architects.

Opening Times and Location

25 April to 7 June 2026   

RIBA North and Tate Liverpool, Gallery 2, 21 Mann Island, Liverpool, L3 1BP

Monday to Sunday including bank holidays: 10am to 5.50pm

Free

Check before you visit: RIBA North and visitor information at Tate Liverpool

Event Partners

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