Reviews

Gardening with the Bloomsbury Group

Outdoor activities offered Bloomsbury’s women welcome respite from their indoor pursuits

5 Aug 2024

‘Burningly cerebral and slightly mad’ – André Masson at the Pompidou-Metz, reviewed

As a rare exhibition of his work demonstrates, the French Surrealist’s art took a series of very intense twists and turns

1 Aug 2024

How Turner made heavy weather of a changing world

An exhibition of the artist’s depictions of fires, floods and natural disasters draws parallels between the extremities of an earlier age and the current climate crisis

31 Jul 2024

The endless mystique of Franz Kafka

The term ‘Kafkaesque’ is in constant use and misuse, but, a century on from his death, are we any closer to understanding the man himself?

31 Jul 2024

Mohammed Sami turns history inside out at Blenheim

The Baghdad-born artist’s gently subversive installations at Blenheim Palace make keen observations about the nature of war and of privilege, and who gets to be a hero

30 Jul 2024

We’ll almost have Paris – the Olympic opening ceremony, reviewed

The riverine procession of competing nations took the focus off the athletes, but the spectacle of Celine Dion belting out Edith Piaf from the Eiffel Tower was worth the four-hour wait

27 Jul 2024

Rave culture gets the museum treatment

From the flyer designs to the thumping music, a 1980s rave reconstructed in virtual reality feels almost like the real thing – with one crucial missing element

26 Jul 2024

The silversmith who struck gold at Tiffany

Edward C. Moore played a crucial role in the firm’s 19th-century success and his own collecting inspired some of its most impressive creations.

25 Jul 2024

The feuding artists who shaped art after the Russian Revolution

Sjeng Scheijen’s new book tells the story of Kazimir Malevich and Vladimir Tatlin’s competing artistic outlooks in the years after the Bolshevik revolution with verve

21 Jul 2024

How Marguerite Duras reinvented cinema

Though she remains best known as a writer, the French avant-gardist was a formidable force behind the camera, as a season at the ICA in London demonstrates

19 Jul 2024

The light relief of Anthony McCall

When viewed in the right environment, the artist’s sculptures in light and experimental films illuminate new ways to think about objects in space

18 Jul 2024

How to paint a revolution in miniature

The British-Iranian artist Laila Tara H’s refined images are thoughtfully framed to express her frustration with a patriarchal society – but never at the expense of playfulness

18 Jul 2024

Olivia Laing’s guide to radical growth

Gardens aren’t just lovesome things. In the writer’s gently rambling book on the subject, they are seedbeds of rebellion too

12 Jul 2024

How Bomberg and Auerbach reached dizzying heights

Before and after the Second World War, David Bomberg explored a vertiginous new style of landscape painting – and his student Frank Auerbach was clearly taking notes

10 Jul 2024

From Bruges to the beach, it’s a big summer for sculpture in Belgium

Between the Bruges and Beaufort Triennials, contemporary art enthusiasts are spoiled for choice – and may see some unexpected sights

9 Jul 2024

The art dealer who scammed his way to the top

A memoir by the friend and business partner of convicted fraudster Inigo Philbrick raises disturbing questions about the art world

9 Jul 2024

Contemporary art casts a spell in a London chapel

The Fitzrovia Chapel is an atmospheric choice of venue for an exhibition with an occult edge

The last bohemians living in New York

The ‘Loft Law’ of 1982 protected artists living in industrial zones from rising rents and eviction. Joshua Charow’s photographs record the members of an endangered tribe

4 Jul 2024

Getting down and dirty with Albert Serra

At the Eye Filmmuseum, the latest provocation by the Catalan artist and director features French libertines and turns us all into Peeping Toms

4 Jul 2024

The puckish figures of Franciszka Themerson

The Polish-born artist’s paintings and drawings may have an air of the doodle, but her politically radical work is thrillingly inventive

2 Jul 2024

Royals with really grand designs

From Louis XIV to Catherine the Great, monarchs didn’t just commission ambitious projects, but also played a serious part in the design process

The afterlives of the wives of Henry VIII

Being married to the monarch was a hazardous business, but all six queens have lived on in popular memory and the artistic imagination

28 Jun 2024

The British artists who took a restless approach to still life

Still-life painting in Britain really took off in the 20th century when artists adopted a more experimental approach

28 Jun 2024

The weird reflections of Jean Cocteau

An exhibition in Venice underscores the artist’s restless imagination and shapeshifting tendencies

26 Jun 2024