Visual arts
Bruegel in Black and White: Three Grisailles Reunited, Courtauld GalleryMonday, 08 February 2016![]() Now that Renaissance altarpieces live for the most part in museums and not churches, our experience of them is, quite literally, flat. Once, the winged altarpieces so popular in northern Europe, comprising a central panel flanked by two moveable “... Read more... |
Painting the Modern Garden, Royal AcademySunday, 31 January 2016![]() Painting the Modern Garden explores the interstices between nature and ourselves as revealed in the cultivation of gardens, that most delightful and frustrating of occupations, and an almost obsessive subject for many artists. About 150 paintings... Read more... |
Saul Leiter, Photographers' GalleryMonday, 25 January 2016![]() One of the great joys of being a critic is discovering someone remarkable you’ve never heard of before. By the time he died in 2013 aged 90, the American photographer Saul Leiter had gained a degree of recognition, but it had been slow in coming and... Read more... |
100 Works of Art That Will Define Our AgeSunday, 24 January 2016![]() The back cover of my book makes a big claim. “This book dares”, it says, “to predict the 100 most significant works of art made since the 1990s.” Although the tagline is an entirely accurate description of what I attempt to accomplish in my study of... Read more... |
John Akomfrah: Vertigo Sea, Arnolfini, BristolSaturday, 23 January 2016![]() Artist and filmmaker John Akomfrah’s multi-screen film installation Vertigo Sea is an epic meditation on mankind’s relationship with the watery world. Exploring themes of migration, environmental destruction and slavery, it was one of the most... Read more... |
Lumiere London 2016Monday, 18 January 2016![]() To liberate traffic-choked city streets for pedestrians, to suspend phantasmagorical, literally high art above their heads and give a sense that London belongs to them: that’s an admirable vision, surely. Artichoke has been wowing the crowds since... Read more... |
Keep Calm and Knuckle UnderSunday, 17 January 2016![]() “He lives in Woolwich and Warsaw”. From which author note you might conclude that Owen Hatherley, author of The Ministry of Nostalgia, is not your ordinary kind of UK critic, comfortably ensconced (usually) in North or fashionable East London.... Read more... |
The Story of Scottish Art, BBC FourThursday, 14 January 2016![]() “Finding the Light”, the second episode of this four-part series, took us to the period when Scottish intellectuals led the world in innovative and revolutionary thinking, Edinburgh’s neo-classical architecture in the leafy streets of the New Town... Read more... |
When Bowie and Boyd hoaxed the art worldTuesday, 12 January 2016![]() In 1994 the art magazine Modern Painters invited fresh blood onto its editorial board. The new intake included a novelist, William Boyd, and a rock star, David Bowie. "That’s how I got to know him," says Boyd. "We’d sit at the table with all these... Read more... |
Søren Dahlgaard’s Dough PortraitsSunday, 03 January 2016![]() Can a portrait really be a portrait if we can’t see a person’s face? And what if the reason we can’t see their face is that it is covered with a lump of dough? Is it a joke? And if it is a joke, is it on us or them? Or perhaps it is a joke about art... Read more... |
Michael Palin’s Quest for Artemisia, BBC FourTuesday, 29 December 2015![]() For his latest journey Michael Palin, actor, writer, novelist, comedian, Python, traveller, has gone beyond geography in search of the visual arts with his characteristic enthusiasm, eclectic curiosity, and sense of discovery.With his usual... Read more... |
Best of 2015: ArtMonday, 28 December 2015![]() From weaselly shyster to spineless drip, the biographies of Goya’s subjects are often superfluous: exactly what he thought of each of his subjects is jaw-droppingly evident in each and every portrait he painted. Quite how Goya got away with it is a... Read more... |
