Slow Down or Perish
While the National Gallery’s Zurbarán exhibition quietly humiliates our scrolling generation with its demand for undivided attention, Norwegian photographer Andreas Rød delivers the same merciless prescription through a contemporary lens.
From Baroque saints suspended in luminous silence to modern bodies trapped mid-performance, both artists deliver one unflinching message: in 2026, the most radical act left is simply to look properly.
No filters. No shortcuts. No mercy for the distracted.
This is not another courteous exhibition review. It is a cultural indictment — with 400-year-old paintings and razor-sharp photographs serving as the evidence.
Attention is resistance.
Slowness is subversion.
And right now, in London, it has never felt more urgent.