Can’t decide what to do with your two delicious days off? This is how to fill them up
1. Fill your eyes with sparkles at the Light Festival at Battersea Power Station
Europe’s largest brick building is no stranger to sparkling spectacles. The Grade II-listed Art Deco masterpiece has appeared in Hitchcock films and is on the cover of one of the most iconic albums of the last generation: Pink Floyd’s ‘Animals’. Now it’s playing backdrop again, and glowing up the gloomy London winter evenings in the process, as seven shining light installations designed by international artists pepper the building for its annual Light Festival. Look out for giant glowing blue butterflies, a series of intriguing-sounding ‘floating geometric matrixes’ and interactive installations like bicycle-powered glowing archways.
2. Think about the Roman Empire at British Museum exhibition ‘Legion: Life in the Roman Army’
This is a rollicking-looking new exhibition for the British Museum, which attempts to put you inside the daily life – both domestic and fighting – of the Roman Legions that controlled much of the world for half a century. It’s about how the elite troops fought: but also about how they lived, and the daily lives of the Empire’s many settled garrisons. Across the course of the exhibit, you’ll meet warriors from Egypt, Italy and England, with over 200 supporting objects, many on display in the UK for the first time, including the world’s oldest intact legionary shield and the world’s oldest set of Roman segmental body armour (which was only unearthed in 2018).
3. See work from British artists of the African, Caribbean and South Asian diasporas at ‘Entangled Pasts, 1768–Now’
Art isn’t always pretty pictures. Sometimes, art is politics; sometimes, art is power. ‘Entangled Pasts’ places work by contemporary British artists of the African, Caribbean and South Asian diasporas alongside paintings and sculptures by Royal Academicians of the past. The aim is to highlight how art has served to perpetuate racism and colonialism, or at the very least profit from it. It opens with depictions of Black figures by Gainsborough and Reynolds, portraits of former slaves, abolitionists, attendants and illegitimate children. And there are contemporary works by the likes of Yinka Shonibare and Sonia Boyce.
4. Get eight dishes, main and dessert at Atul Kochhar’s Kanishka
Kanishka has launched a brand-new brunch menu focussing on PanIndian food, with a menu embracing the flavours of India’s various regions, from Punjab to Kerala, Kolkata to Delhi and everywhere in between. Kanishka’s skilled kitchen team, led by chef Atul Kochhar, have curated a symphony of new dishes, including Khari paneer tikka, Palak paneer and Chicken tikka pie. And the best bit? You’ll be greeted with a seasonal welcome Kanishka punch cocktail and two hours of bottomless wine or beer.
5. Have a tropical time at Kew Orchid Festival
The Princess of Wales Conservatory at Kew Gardens is getting a Madagascanmakeover courtesy of the latest annual mind-bending orchid display that takes over the iconic glasshouse each year. The exotic display will celebrate Madagascar’s natural beauty and biodiversity – the place is home to 14,000 plants found nowhere else in the world. Look out for sculptures of native animals carved out of plants, including giraffe weevils and ring-tailed lemurs, installations on extinct species and learn more about the Malagasy orchids that grow at Kew.
6. 51% off bottomless dim sum and a glass of bubbly at Leong’s Legend
Never ending baskets of delicious dim sum. Need we say more? That means tucking into as many dumplings, rolls and buns as you can scoff down, all expertly put together by a Chinatown restaurant celebrating more than ten years of business. Taiwanese pork buns? Check. Pork and prawn soup dumplings? You betcha. ‘Supreme’ crab meat xiao long bao? Of course! And just to make sure you’re all set, Leong’s Legend is further furnishing your palate with a chilled glass of prosecco. Lovely bubbly.
7. Explore Japan’s myths and manga at the Young V&A’s new exhibition
The first temporary exhibition at Young V&A is a real delight, and should appeal to grown-up Nippophiles just as much as school kids. ‘Japan: Myths to Manga’ is a grab bag of the more eye-catching highlights of the past few centuries of Japanese pop culture, taking in everything from Hokusai’s ‘The Great Wave’ to copious Studio Ghibli appearances, to a draw-your-own manga craft corner (complete with arrows to reminds you to draw the cells from right to left). You’ll have gone in thinking Japan was cool; you’ll come out thinking it’s cooler.
8. Get ready to take on the UK’s most daring aerial park
Our Table for Two restaurant box is back, baby. And there really is no better way to go out and explore the city than with 50% off some of its most sought-after destinations. This limited-edition digital box of goodies includes seven, yes seven, vouchers for a handpicked selection of restaurants around the city. Sign up, receive a code and book your spot.