Daphne Wright: Deep-Rooted Things
This show is a celebration of the domestic, and the poignant sculpture of Wright’s two sons, now o...
Encounters: Giacometti x Huma Bhabha
The first of three exhibitions to position historic sculptures by Alberto Giacometti with new works ...
The Parisian scenes that Edward Burra is known for are joyful and sardonic, but his work depicting t...
The first of its kind, this vast show is a stunning tour of the realism movement of the 1920s and 30...
Complex, multilayered paintings and sculptures reek of the dark histories of slavery and colonialism...
Through film, sound and dance, Emma Critchley’s continuing investigative project takes audiences o...
Eniwaye Oluwaseyi – interview: Rijksakademie Open Studios
Eniwaye Oluwaseyi paints figures, including himself, friends and members of his family, within compo...
Frank Auerbach, Britain’s greatest postwar painter, has a belated German homecoming, which capture...
Dame Jillian Sackler, the art lover and philanthropist, has died aged 84...
In this major retrospective, the viewer is like an avatar navigating the humans – real and CGI –...
Edvard Munch’s portraits have flown under the radar, but getting to know his sitters reveals a lot...
Delaine Le Bas – interview: ‘People still have expectations about what...
From the heart of her installation at the White House in east London, Romany artist Delaine Le Bas t...
Elizabeth Fritsch: Otherworldly Vessels
With many objects drawn from Elizabeth Fritsch’s private collection, this first retrospective of t...
Frieze Los Angeles and Felix Art Fair, 2025
A much-needed tonic after the fires laid us low, Frieze art week did take place, the city’s art co...
Forbidden Territories: 100 Years of Surreal Landscapes
Ambiguous images and twisted and brooding forms rewrite the meaning of landscape in this exploration...
With 15 paintings and five works on paper, this show takes on a journey spanning 20 years of Dana Sc...
This innovative, elegantly assembled show of the South Korean artist Do Ho Sun gives us a glimpse in...
Dora Carrington: Beyond Bloomsbury
For the first time, the “unpindownable” Dora Carrington is defined in terms of her own person an...
Electric Dreams: Art and Technology Before the Internet
From a dress made from 200 lightbulbs to works made by computer, the Tate takes us on a dizzying, de...
Digging in Another Time: Derek Jarman’s Modern Nature
Works by Derek Jarman are complemented by commissioned responses from six contemporary artists, lead...
Erica Rutherford: The Human Comedy
This small show is important in showing the shifts that took place between the early and late work o...
Children scrapping, lovers embracing, the pain of losing a loved one, even Brexit, all demonstrate t...
From the works of Nancy Holt and Richard Long in the 1960s and 70s to contemporary artists, this sho...
Enchanted Alchemies: Magic, Mysticism, and the Occult in Art
In 1924, the surrealist manifesto stated that art serves as a magical act, invoking mysteries beyond...
Emma McNally: The Earth is Knot Flat
Installed by Emma McNally over the month preceding its opening, this exhibition draws us into a mani...
Flora Yukhnovich – interview: ‘I’m always looking at history through...
Where better to view the work of contemporary rococo-inspired painter Flora Yukhnovich than at the W...
Alongside work by Joseph Beuys, six contemporary Japanese artists respond to an artist who saw no bo...
This year’s festival urges us to believe that, collectively, we can build a better future. And whi...
Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley: The Soul Station
The Berlin techno club provides the perfect setting for a pioneering game-making artist whose works ...
Bringing together works from the 1940s to the 2000s, this is the first institutional exhibition in E...