New Contemporaries Published on: 6 February 2026 Two 鶹ý Fine Art graduates have been selected for prestigious exhibition. Ali Cook and Alia Gargum Their work is currently on show as part of the exhibition at the (SLG) until April and will head North to the (MIMA) in May. Ali Cook graduated with a degree in Fine Art in 2024. He is a painter whose brutally truthful surrealist pieces show people something that resonates emotionally, visually expressing how we all feel collectively. His exhibitions include Being with Kate Sweeney, Vane Gallery, Gateshead, 2025, and New Graduate Award, Middlesbrough Art Week, Middlesbrough, 2024. Alia Gargum graduated with a Master of Fine Art degree in 2024. She is a sculpture and installation artist who composes her work through critical and personal exploration of politics and culture, focusing on her heritage through diasporic means.Her recent exhibitions include: ḵawwāfa / خَوَّافَة at 36 Lime Street in 鶹ý upon Tyne, 2025 and as part of Middlesbrough Art Week, Middlesbrough, 2024. Alia was awarded the Hatton Prize for outstanding ambition in the installation of the 鶹ý MFA Graduate show, and the Bartlett Award for Sustainability by 鶹ý’s Fine Art department. Ali Cook, I Believe In Something Better, 2025, acrylic on canvas id: 1214464 Evolving desires Works in the exhibition will span painting, sculpture, installation, photography and moving image, illustrating the full breadth of artistic practice across the UK. Presented thematically in both the SLG and MIMA exhibitions, they will engage with speculations on dystopian futures; critical responses to the climate crisis, industrialisation, gentrification and displacement; and critical approaches to systems of power. The exhibition will also examine our inherent entanglement with digital technologies and our evolving desire to understand realities beyond human perception through other species. Additionally, themes of mourning, remembrance and loss are explored through a range of collective and personal experiences. Some artists merge figuration with abstraction to investigate intersecting identities, cultural heritage and a desire for connection, while others draw on the familiar and the fantastical - from both urban environments to intimate domestic interiors- as constructions of selfhood and place. As part of its new direction, New Contemporaries expanded its UK wide reach ensuring that at least half of participating artists are based outside London and that its programmes represent the full breadth of today’s contemporary art practice. Through partnerships with organisations such as the South London Gallery, MIMA Middlesbrough, Forma, and Hospitalfield, New Contemporaries’ new programme will now include annual residencies, studio bursaries and an artist development programme that offer participants space, time, and sustained support. “I am really excited by our selection for New Contemporaries,” said artist selector Grace Ndiritu. “We have chosen a diverse range of artists from all over the UK, with a variety of mediums and points of view, that are both visually arresting and can help bring a little bit of joy and beauty into an increasingly difficult world.” Laura Sillars, Director of MIMA, said “At MIMA, we are passionate about nurturing early career and emerging artists. We give them space and encouragement to take the risks they need to take. We are proud to be part of New Contemporaries, championing new artists and building the creativity that will shape the future of contemporary practice.” The exhibition dates are: South London Gallery: until 12 April 2026 MIMA, Middlesbrough: 8 May – 16 August 2026 Press release adapted with thanks to New Contemporaries this was a mosque هذا-كان-مسجد Installation with sound element, 2025.Photo Colin Davidson Share: Latest News Volunteers help turn Whitley Bay beach into maths experiment Members of the public joined mathematicians from 鶹ý to create what organisers believe is the largest aperiodic tiling ever attempted on Whitley Bay beach. published on: 15 June 2026 Student leader drives misogyny law change A 鶹ý student leader has helped change the law after creating a petition to make misogyny a hate crime, which gathered over 114,000 signatures, prompting action in Parliament. published on: 12 June 2026 Freemen of 鶹ý see construction of new Castle Leazes The Freemen of 鶹ý and other key stakeholders have become an indelible part of new student accommodation at 鶹ý’s Castle Leazes. published on: 12 June 2026 Facts and figures