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The Sloane Street Guide to 2026: A Year of Well-Timed Delights in Chelsea

From floral takeovers and theatre milestones to art, fashion and craft, these are the Chelsea dates worth circling now—because anticipation is the chicest way to survive January.

6 January 2026

The Sloane Street Guide to 2026

There’s something deliciously defiant about making plans in the depths of January. While the cold persists and daylight remains scarce, science offers the perfect antidote: anticipation itself. Research shows that looking forward to positive events triggers a pleasurable release of dopamine, that clever little neurotransmitter associated with higher levels of wellbeing. 

So consider this your prescription for the winter blues — a carefully curated dose of future joy, from the theatrical brilliance of the Royal Court’s 70th anniversary to the September return of Chelsea Arts Festival, from the botanical wisdom of Chelsea Physic Garden to the creative excellence found in every corner of the neighbourhood. 

Mark your calendars, start the countdown, and let the anticipation begin.

The Royal Court Theatre's 70th anniversary season

Throughout 2026

The Royal Court Theatre celebrates seven decades of theatrical innovation with a season that promises to be as provocative as its past. This Sloane Square institution continues its legacy of championing new voices with three standout productions: Guess How Much I Love You starring Robert Aramayo, who stared in The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and the award-winning I Swear), Archduke, and The Afronauts. Each promises the kind of boundary-pushing drama that has made the Royal Court essential viewing for anyone who takes their theatre seriously.

Tickets: from £15; royalcourttheatre.com/stories/our-70th-anniversary-season/
'Guess How Much I Love You' at the Royal Court Theatre

Living Medicine at Chelsea Physic Garden

March to November 2026

Chelsea Physic Garden’s Living Medicine course offers five full-day workshops exploring the healing power of plants. Whether you’re drawn to managing sleep and anxiety, mastering self-care basics, or learning about natural skin remedies, this historic garden shares centuries of botanical wisdom for modern wellness seekers.



From £140; chelseaphysicgarden.co.uk/event/living-medicine-the-whole-body-course-package-2/
Living Medicine at Chelsea Physic Garden

THE LONG NOW: Saatchi Gallery at 40

Until 26 April 2026

Saatchi Gallery celebrates four decades of shaping contemporary art with THE LONG NOW. This expansive exhibition resurrects Richard Wilson’s defining 20:50, which features a room filled with recycled engine oil. This installation creates a mirrored, immersive environment that subtly unsettles viewers and encourages them to reflect on themes of fragility, the environment, and uncertainty—all showcased in a striking new setting on the top floor. Jenny Saville’s monumental Passage anchors a show that spans compelling new commissions and landmark works, from Olafur Eliasson’s light installations to Mat Collishaw’s tech meditations. It’s both celebration and provocation, reminding us why the gallery remains essential to international contemporary art.

Tickets: From £10; saatchigallery.com/exhibition/the-long-now-saatchi-gallery-at-40
Richard Wilson, 20 50. Installation view 1991

Comedy at The Cadogan Hall with Jenny Eclair

Friday 27 March 2026, 7.30pm

Cadogan Hall continues its comedy series with the deliciously acerbic Jenny Eclair headlining its regular mixed bill comedy night. The first woman to win the Perrier Award back in 1995, Eclair has since taken multiple shows on tour, starred in BBC’s Grumpy Old Women and co-hosts Older and Wider (the podcast for “people who don’t know what a podcast is”). 

This beautiful Grade II listed auditorium has become an unexpectedly intimate venue for comedy, having previously hosted Sara Pascoe, Dylan Moran, and Lucy Beaumont. Expect perfectly pitched observations on modern life from Eclair — who’s also a critically acclaimed author with seven novels under her belt — alongside a stellar supporting line-up.

Tickets: £25 - £35; cadoganhall.com/whats-on/comedy-at-cadogan-hall-with-jenny-eclair/
Jenny Eclair

Schiaparelli: Fashion Becomes Art

From 28 March 2026

Opening 28 March, the V&A presents the UK’s first exhibition devoted to Maison Schiaparelli. From Elsa Schiaparelli’s surrealist collaborations with Salvador Dalí (yes, the Shoe hat makes an appearance) to Daniel Roseberry’s contemporary vision at 21 Place Vendôme, over 200 objects trace fashion’s most innovative house. The V&A’s own ‘Skeleton’ and ‘Tears’ dresses join artworks by Picasso and Man Ray in a show that positions Schiaparelli not just as designer but as pioneering female entrepreneur who transformed ordinary objects into extraordinary statements.

vam.ac.uk/exhibitions/schiaparelli
Portrait of Elsa Schiaparelli by Man Ray, 1933

Chelsea in Bloom

19-23 May 2026

The annual transformation begins as Chelsea’s boutiques, restaurants and hotels compete to create the most spectacular floral installations for this award-winning festival. Extending the RHS Chelsea Flower Show beyond the Royal Hospital grounds, shopfronts bloom into theatrical displays following this year’s theme, ‘Out of This World’. From Sloane Street’s luxury flagships to King’s Road stylish boutiques, expect window displays that push the boundaries of floral art, reimagining the realms of astronomy, mythology and spirituality in the most photogenic week of Chelsea’s calendar.

chelseainbloom.co.uk/

Chelsea Arts Festival

17-20 September 2026

Mark 17-20 September for the return of Chelsea Arts Festival, transforming the neighbourhood into a cultural playground where art spills from galleries onto streets. If last year’s inaugural programme is any indication, expect an eclectic mix of exhibitions, performances, and installations that celebrate Chelsea’s creative spirit. 

The antidote to January? A diary full of reasons to leave the house. Chelsea’s calendar for 2026 reads like a prescription for the winter-weary. Science says anticipation releases dopamine. We say: book the tickets, mark the dates, and let January do its worst. The rest of the year knows exactly what it’s doing.

chelseaartsfestival.com/whats-on/

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