As Oasis return to London for what are billed as their final UK concerts this weekend, fans heading to Wembley Stadium have one last chance to see Brothers: Liam and Noel Through Kevin Cummins’ Lens — a free, open-air exhibition just minutes from the stage.
Running until 30 September, the show features a series of rare and previously unseen photographs by acclaimed music photographer Kevin Cummins, capturing the Gallagher brothers in intimate, unguarded moments from the early days of Oasis.
Presented along Olympic Way, the public installation offers more than 20 large-scale portraits — many taken in 1994 as the band prepared to release their seminal debut, Definitely Maybe. The images come from Cummins’ vast personal archive, including his 2025 monograph The Masterplan, and chart the brothers’ journey from scrappy Mancunian upstarts to the most talked-about band in Britain.
Shot in hotel rooms, tour buses and side streets across the UK and Europe, the portraits are candid and unstyled — a visual record of Liam and Noel before the tabloid headlines and sibling spats took centre stage. What emerges is a warm, often funny portrait of two brothers whose relationship would become both their power source and their undoing.
The exhibition is part of the Wembley Park Art Trail, a growing programme of public art and cultural events designed to animate the area beyond stadium shows. It coincides with Oasis’s headline concerts at Wembley Stadium on 27 and 28 September, and complements the Ultimate Guide to Oasis at Wembley, available now at wembleypark.com.
Whether you’re there for the music, the memories, or the merch, Brothers offers one more reason to head to Wembley this weekend — and a rare chance to see a softer side of the band that defined a generation.
Elena Leo is the Arts & Lifestyle Editor of Ikon London Magazine.




