Production Second Trimester's promotional photo featuring Krishna, one hand on chin gazing up longingly, and his mother, looking very cool pulling down her bright red glasses with a questioning look. the Image has white flowers and collage-style red, orange and yellow block colours.

Battersea Arts Centre announces Spring 26 Season

A celebration of extraordinary performance and radical, socially conscious new work.

This week we announced our Spring 26 Season. The programme will see artists from all over the world come together on Lavender Hill this Spring.

The international programme for the next eight months includes four UK and World Premieres, two festivals and two building takeovers.  

We are exploring how we live alongside each other, focusing on desire, intimacy and connection in ambitious and provocative ways and playing with both form and sentiment.

Artists at all stages of their careers are represented, from centring young people with Homegrown Festival, to presenting world-renowned artists making work about experiences both deeply specific and yet universally connected.  

 

This season brings together bold, radical work that engages with the world as it is: complex, political, playful and alive. The programme speaks directly to communities and voices that are often marginalized, creating a season that is energising, provocative and unafraid to take risks. It invites audiences to consider what connects us, what we desire, and how we nurture one another in the imagining of alternative worlds.” 

Pelin Başaran, Creative Director

BAC has always been a place where artists are trusted to take risks — with ideas, form and the questions they’re asking of the world. This season reflects that spirit, from work originated and developed here in our building on Lavender Hill, to artists from across the world coming through our doors. That belief in creative freedom goes hand in hand with our commitment to widening access with Pay What You Can tickets, so that ambitious, exceptional art and performance can be experienced by as many people as possible.”

Tarek Iskander, Artistic Director and CEO

 

Explore the season

A tentative audience sitting on the floor blur into the shadows behind two vibrant bold figures, illuminated in purple light. One person is suspended in air by rope bondage knot, with neon red, pink and green rope, hands crossed behind their back. The other, with their back to the camera is gently holding the first person's head and pressing their own to it, creating a warm sense of connection and safety. In the purple background various mundane objects are spun in neon macramé creating unique patterns.

4 - 6 Jun

Bunny

Daniel Kok and Luke George
Co-presented by BAC and Queer East Festival

In rope bondage, a ‘Bunny’ is the person being tied. Artists Daniel Kok and Luke George ask: what if everyone in the theatre is a Bunny?

Mini-golf installation called, ‘Algorithmic K-Holes and the Techno-Serfdom of Simulated Entrapment Under Slop Capitalism'’, features a winding green path with white rims, curving under and behind a screen which projects a man in a golf cart, and back out to a round space with the hole. A woman in a black top and black and white plaid trousers is celebrating with hand up and club in one hand.

17 Jun - 26 Jul

The Art of Mini Golf

A playable exhibition by RISING Melbourne

The long-awaited UK Premiere of this major exhibition lands at BAC this summer.

Battersea Arts Centre's 2026 Programme colours in pink and subtle green with a zig-jagged misty haze texture.

Coming Soon

Homegrown Festival 2026

Curated and produced by BAC's Young Producers

A celebration of bold ideas, innovative artistry and radical experimentation from a brand-new cohort of BAC’s young producers.