The Private View: ‘ALWAYS EVER SINCE 83’
The Private View: ‘ALWAYS EVER SINCE 83’
On Thursday 14th May 2026, Woodbury House hosted the Private View of ‘ALWAYS EVER SINCE 83’ — the most significant solo presentation to date by Torrick ‘TOXIC’ Ablack, and a defining moment in the gallery’s programme.
This was not simply an opening reception. It was the formal recognition of an artist whose contribution to the story of contemporary art has been continuous, unbroken, and entirely on his own terms for more than four decades — and whose work has, for the first time, been brought together in a single room to make that fact unmistakable.
From the moment guests arrived on Sackville Street, the weight of the occasion was clear. Inside the gallery, the full arc of TOXIC’s practice — from his earliest works in 1983 through to a major new body of paintings made specifically for this exhibition — surrounded the artist himself. Collectors, curators, peers and friends of the work moved through rooms that, taken together, held forty years in conversation.
Meet the Artist
The Private View was distinguished by the presence of Torrick ‘TOXIC’ Ablack, who travelled to London for the occasion.
For many guests, the opportunity to spend an evening in TOXIC’s company was the significance of the night. An artist who has been at the centre of contemporary visual culture since 1983 — present in the work of Jean-Michel Basquiat, exhibited at Sidney Janis Gallery alongside the most consequential figures of his generation, and continuing to build a singular practice for more than four decades since — was, on this evening, in the room.
Conversations carried through the gallery throughout the night. Guests moved between the works themselves and the artist who made them, with TOXIC speaking openly about his process, his history, and the convictions that have shaped the practice from the beginning. The result was an evening that felt less like an opening and more like a recognition.
Signed exhibition catalogues — featuring a foreword by Woodbury House and an introduction in the artist’s own voice — were available on the evening, allowing collectors to take home a document of the exhibition itself.
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Forty Years, One Room
A defining feature of the Private View was the experience of seeing TOXIC’s practice held together in a single space for the first time.
The exhibition brings a major new body of work made specifically for this presentation into direct conversation with selected historical pieces dating back to 1983. On the walls of Woodbury House, the earliest expressions of a practice now widely recognised as foundational sit alongside the newest — works made in TOXIC’s studio in Brittany over the past year, carrying the freedom of an artist long past the need to prove anything.
For guests at the Private View, this collapse of distance between then and now was not a curatorial argument made in essays or wall texts. It was visible. Tangible. In the room.
Forty years of practice, held together. One continuous line.
Exclusive Limited-Edition Prints
The Private View also marked the release of two exclusive limited edition prints accompanying the exhibition — both available to enquire about through the gallery.
The first is a print release by the artist himself — a signed and numbered edition produced specifically to mark the exhibition, drawn directly from one of the works in the show.
The second is a collaborative release with the Estate of Rammellzee, built on an original print previously released by the estate. TOXIC has hand-finished twenty of those prints, working directly onto the print — placing his own hand in dialogue with one of Rammellzee’s enduring works. Each of the twenty is therefore unique. No two are the same.
It is not a retrospective gesture. It is the continuation of a relationship built in the formative years of New York’s underground — between two artists who were not simply contemporaries, but part of the same creative ecosystem. The release places that relationship back in dialogue with the work, alongside an exhibition that recognises both artists as central to the story of their era.
A Landmark Solo Exhibition in London
‘ALWAYS EVER SINCE 83’ is the most comprehensive presentation of TOXIC’s work staged in London to date.
This is not a thematic grouping or a survey assembled after the fact. It is the considered placement of an artist whose practice has shaped the language of contemporary art globally — and whose work, despite that foundational role, has rarely been given the institutional weight in London that it carries in the broader story.
By presenting ‘ALWAYS EVER SINCE 83’ at our flagship Mayfair gallery, Woodbury House has positioned TOXIC’s practice within serious contemporary art discourse in London. The Private View signalled the beginning of that recognition.
Now on View
‘ALWAYS EVER SINCE 83’ is now open to the public at Woodbury House, 29 Sackville Street, Mayfair, London W1S 3DX, and runs until 26th June 2026. No RSVP is required during normal gallery hours.
Works from the exhibition are available for acquisition. Private viewings can be arranged for collectors seeking deeper advisory discussion, and the full exhibition catalogue — including the foreword by Woodbury House and the introduction in the artist’s own voice — is available digitally and in print.
To enquire about available works, request the catalogue, or receive invitations to future Private Views and artist-led events, please contact [email protected] or call 0203 750 2222.
The Private View marked a moment. The exhibition itself continues — and with it, the practice that has been continuously in motion since 1983.