Search results for: First Look

Will the Glasgow School of Art ever be rebuilt?

Six years after the devastating fire, Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s masterpiece is no closer to being restored. What can possibly explain the delay?

12 Sep 2024

Parcours des Mondes offers a world of opportunity

The Paris event celebrating art from around the world returns this autumn with a new focus on modern and contemporary work

9 Sep 2024

Acquisitions of the month: August 2024

A Madonna of the Cherries by Quentin Metsys and a very rare sketchbook by Caspar David Friedrich are among the most important works to have entered public collections in the last month

6 Sep 2024

Playing with Design: Gameboards, Art, and Culture

The rich visual history of gameboards since the mid 18th century is celebrated in this show, which also highlights how abstract art influenced game design

6 Sep 2024

Tamsin Wimhurst: the woman who saves the extraordinary homes of ordinary people

The social historian who bought the David Parr House in Cambridge finds herself drawn to fantastical interiors in unexpected settings

6 Sep 2024

The surreal films of Jan Švankmajer

When it comes to conjuring the uncanny atmosphere and impossible logic of dreams, the Czech film-maker has few equals

4 Sep 2024

Bringing Pompeii back to life

Recent conservation efforts have led to new discoveries of stunning interiors and wall paintings that also tell us more about everyday life in the city

2 Sep 2024

The intensely felt art of Elisabeth Frink

From her early associations with the ‘Geometry of Fear’ school of sculpture, Frink went on to evoke any number of emotions

2 Sep 2024

The young collectors on the hunt for Old Masters

New York-based collectors Domenico Lanzara and Sean Imfeld speak to Apollo about their obsession with Old Master drawings

2 Sep 2024

In praise of the cat ladies of contemporary art

Hettie Judah considers how artists such as Tracey Emin and Kiki Smith have represented the sacred bond between women and their cats

2 Sep 2024

Are commercial galleries getting tired of visitors?

Some of the major galleries are cutting public-facing jobs, but making their physical and virtual sites less approachable could have unintended consequences

30 Aug 2024

Message on a bottle – the Australian vineyard giving a boost to local art

This dynamic young wine producer was quick to become a corking success – and is making sure artists from the region are in on the fun

28 Aug 2024

The tennis coach who’s having a ball collecting abstract art

James Trotman, who coaches Britain’s current #1 tennis player, talks to Apollo about his love of modern British painting and why art and tennis are a good match

27 Aug 2024

The favourite fabric of the French elite

The printed, patterned cloth called toile de Jouy was at its height of its popularity in the 18th century, but still delights today

26 Aug 2024

Creative Scotland closes its key fund for artists amid government budget freeze

Plus: Staff at the Noguchi Museum stage a walk-out over its dress code; and Alain Delon (1935–2024)

23 Aug 2024

‘I wanted conversations, I wanted people, I wanted the play’ – an interview with Hildegard Bechtler

Creating the sets for plays at the National Theatre, the Barbican and the Royal Court is no mean feat. The German-born set designer speaks to Apollo about how she works her magic

22 Aug 2024

The French Renaissance palace putting Brueghel and Braque side by side

The renovated Fondation Bemberg in Toulouse is a fitting home for its founder’s eclectic art collection

20 Aug 2024

The intoxicating adverts of Armando Testa

The Italian artist had no shortage of spirited designs for corporate brewers and distillers keen to convey the essence of their products

19 Aug 2024

Is the art of medical drama in good health?

Some artists’ stories are entwined with hospitals and healthcare institutions – Andy Warhol getting shot, Vincent van Gogh checking in…

16 Aug 2024

What are art fairs really for?

Piling into an exhibition hall to see as much art as possible in a short space of time is few people’s idea of a good time, but the most resourceful fairs provide some worthwhile surprises

16 Aug 2024

A potted history of English eccentricity

From satirical chamber pots to cat-shaped jugs, Henry Willett’s collection of popular ceramics display wit, horror and anti-French sentiment – sometimes all at once

12 Aug 2024

The lesser-known greats of Abstract Expressionism are making a mark

Art by the movement’s best-known practitioners still fetches huge sums, but it’s work by women and artists of colour that is really taking off

12 Aug 2024

Should art be an Olympic sport? Perhaps it already is

While Pharrell has called for art to be part of the official competition again, let’s not ignore the artists currently making their presence felt in Paris – and the athletes with art-historical credentials

9 Aug 2024

Statues with limitations – the monumental art of Tavares Strachan

The Bahamian-born artist works in many different media, but his larger-than-life monuments to historic figures can feel oddly one-dimensional at times

8 Aug 2024