Rowan Mace: Time’s Light, and Amy Winstanley: Slim Glimpses
The calm and welcoming spaces at this Scottish gallery provide the perfect setting for Amy Winstanle...
A retrospective celebrates German sculptor Isa Genzken whose wide-ranging work sharply critiques the...
À Table: Serpentine Pavilion 2023 by Lina Ghotmeh
Ghotmeh’s sociable pavilion, inspired by trees and sitting down to break bread together, invites u...
Despite its relaxed, fun atmosphere, this year’s festival tackles serious issues. It is about hope...
Clouds and Lights: Impressionism in Holland
This master class in Dutch art history demonstrates the strength of the artistic impulses that came ...
Episode 10: Kara Chin – Concerned Dogs
In a space that appears a cross between a cinema and a place of worship, a warped soundscape, a rauc...
Grayson Perry mocks and self-flagellates his Englishness and class, his childhood memories and copin...
Gabriel Chaile and Laura Ojeda Bär – interview: ‘We’re really into ...
Gabriel Chaile’s first institutional solo show in the UK sees him covering an old chapel in adobe ...
David Remfry – interview: ‘It’s unprecedented that there were no arg...
At 80 years old, David Remfry was just coming to terms with the opportunity to co-ordinate the Royal...
Eileen Cooper – interview: ‘I’d always avoided looking back … but ...
As an exhibition of her previously unseen early works on paper opens at Huxley-Parlour in London, Ei...
Thomas J Price's sculptures, fusions of ordinary people, overturn tradition in their material and sc...
Paula Rego’s giant mural, a bold riposte to patriarchy, with its strong female figures drawn from ...
Ferdinand Hodler: Drawings – Selections from the Musée Jenisch Vevey
This small but illuminating show is a superb reintroduction to a sadly neglected artist, focusing on...
Marco Livingstone’s monograph, with more than 600 illustrations, weaves biographical detail with a...
Venice Architecture Biennale 2023: The Laboratory of the Future
This year’s curator, the Scottish-Ghanaian architect Lesley Lokko, has brought new insights and pe...
Naudline Pierre: This Is Not All There Is
Naudline Pierre draws us into her own uncanny mythical world underpinned by spirituality in a show t...
A World in Common: Contemporary African Photography
Africa’s diverse cultural traditions, the history of modern colonialism and present-day social, po...
Secessions: Klimt, Stuck, Liebermann
At the end of the 19th century a group of artists in Munich, Vienna and Berlin broke away from the t...
This exhibition considers the hottest – and to some most frightening – of hot topics, artificial...
Fashion stylist Shinichi Mita brings together 11 craftspeople to show how traditional Japanese workm...
Material Power: Palestinian Embroidery
More than 40 dresses and embroidered objects from Jordan and the West Bank, along with filmed interv...
Houses squashed by bananas, handbags on legs, cartoon-like cars – Erwin Wurm’s sculptures are su...
Lagos, Peckham, Repeat: Pilgrimage to the Lakes
An absorbing group show explores the familial, economic and spiritual connections between the Nigeri...
The Casablanca Art School: Platforms and Patterns for a Postcolonial Avant...
This is the story of how a group of artists experimenting with strikingly modern and colourful abstr...
Injustices suffered by women – whether burnt at the stake or incarcerated in the Magdalene Institu...
Focusing on paintings of her two beloved but untamed gardens, alongside self-portraits documenting t...
Seamlessly joining calligraphic and ink painting techniques to the painterly gestures of western bru...
A Little History: Jane Hayes Greenwood
Figurative paintings and sculptural works portray Jane Hayes Greenwood's experiences of pain and los...
Beatriz Milhazes – interview: ‘My big ambition is always to try to do ...
On the occasion of a major survey of her work at Margate’s Turner Contemporary, Brazilian artist B...
Helsinki Biennial 2023: New Directions May Emerge
If this second Helsinki Biennial lacks the ‘wow factor’ of its predecessor, it is partially down...