This is a stunning exhibition of photographs that draws out the changing scenery of the city of Leeds over the last 40 years.
Written in 1882 by Henrik Ibsen, this play is an enduring critique of the hypocrisy and corruption of the political system.
Black British music today has an unmistakable style – one that instantly separates it from the output of the two countries that have historically shaped the scene – Jamaica and the US.
Love Music Hate Racism (LMHR) has unveiled four new acts that will be playing at the free anti-Nazi carnival taking place in Victoria Park, east London, on Sunday 27 April.
"It’s important that we’re still organising events against the Nazis. Today we have a lot more nationalities in Britain, but racism is still prevalent.
The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament’s 50 years of activism have produced an amazing archive of posters, leaflets, banners and photos. Its peace symbol is recognised across the world.
Eating habits have been transformed over the past decades due to changing work patterns and attitudes to food.
This is a shocking film that pulls no punches in depicting the brutality of the Iraq war.
The idea behind this unusual exhibition is that alien art critics have collected Earthling modern art and are trying to interpret it.
A bone, cast into the African sky by a prehistoric ape, cuts to a satellite spinning in orbit. A space plane docks with a rotating space station to the strains of Strauss’s Blue Danube. A star-child, poised between human and alien, floats towards the Earth.
Set in Germany during the Second World War and based on a true story, the film looks at Operation Bernhard – a Nazi plan to destabilise the Allies by flooding their economies with forged currency.
Oliver Birch’s play tells the story of Lord Frederick Smith, a 19th century explorer ashamed of the barbarity of the British Empire.