Posts by East End Review
Fishermen's Tales – book review
18th century fishing village folklore is the starting point for Peter Kennedy’s self-published debut novel
Read MoreThe rise of the Little Free Library
Artist-made libraries are popping up all over East London
Read MorePalmers – restaurant review
This E2 restaurant may lack the sheen of rival eateries but the cuisine is top quality
Read MoreINIVA Gallery evening courses begin with A Revisionist History of Art 1946-2015
Five-week programme offers an introduction to art history, covering topics from identity politics to institutional frameworks
Read MoreDocumentary shows 'human face' behind the UK's housing crisis
When her family were made homeless, Daisy-May Hudson picked up a camera and began filming the story of their displacement
Read MoreHackney actor is a headstrong heroine as Antigone
Savannah Gordon-Liburd talks about playing Antigone, theatre for young people – and her plans for the future.
Read MoreJamboree: Cable Street's best kept secret
A former sweet factory now hosts live music from all corners of the globe
Read MoreNurse from St Joseph's Hospice scoops top photography award
Amateur snapper beats competition from 20,000 entries to win International Garden Photographer of the Year Competition
Read MoreAlan A. – 'You have to take me for who I am or move along!'
Alan A. is a gay pop sensation who prefers to amuse rather than to shock
Read MoreMary Barnes: Boo-Bah – art review
Mary Barnes became a successful painter following therapy for schizophrenia in the 1960s. A new exhibition looks at a crucial five-year period in her work
Read MoreTonkotsu – restaurant review
The Narrow Way is going upmarket with the arrival of a Japanese noodle soup restaurant and bar
Read MoreDressing up at London Collections: Men
East London menswear designers went to town with costume and make-believe at London Collections: Men
Read MoreHappy Ending at the Arcola – stage review
Terminal cancer is the subject of new musical Happy Ending
Read MoreSnow in Paradise: How a boy from Hoxton swapped crime for Islam
Snow in Paradise is an East End gangster film based on the true story of screenwriter Martin Askew
Read MoreWorld’s first ‘mindfulness opera’ to go ahead
Lost in Thought is based on an extended meditation and sees performers and audience members do yoga, eat and wash up
Read MoreEast London Painting Prize opens for entries
Bow Arts-run prize offers East London painters the chance to win £10,000 and a solo exhibition
Read MoreSex Shop exhibition to open this month
Transition Gallery is to be decked out with dildos and fetish objects for Sex Shop exhibition
Read MoreHackney artists to stand in the General Election
Two Hackney artists are the latest to announce they are running for Parliament. We speak to them about their political ambitions
Read MoreKay Adshead: 'I never thought I would be seeing women shot in the street for wanting an education'
Playwright Kay Adshead talks about giving a generation of forgotten, ignored and deleted women protesters a voice in her play The Singing Stones
Read MoreThe Singing Stones – stage review: 'reflecting a familiar feeling of impotence'
The Singing Stones carries an important message about the plight of women during the Arab Spring but suffers from a lack of structure
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