Search results for: First Look

Leola Pettway and Qunnie Pettway working at the Freedom Quilting Bee in 1972.

The Gee’s Bend quilt-makers are absolute masters of their craft

The quilts made in Gee’s Bend, Alabama are often compared with modern paintings, but should be seen as great works in their own right

4 Dec 2020
Just what is it that makes today’s homes so different? (1992), Richard Hamilton.

Richard Hamilton: Respective

This exhibition at Pallant House considers the influence of international modernism upon the British Pop artist

27 Nov 2020
Pages 54 (‘Stavesacre’) and 25 (‘Foxglove’) in Jacques le Moyne de Morgues’ florilegium at the V&A (painted c. 1575)

Budding prospects – a botanist’s guide to Elizabethan England

Jacques Le Moyne’s intricate depictions of flowers and herbs were a pioneering contribution to the field of botanical illustration

27 Nov 2020
Lionel Hampton Big Band concert, Houtrusthallen, The Hague (1956), Ed van der Elsken. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

From street parties to state visits – around the world with Ed van der Elsken

The globe-trotting Dutch photographer was always on the lookout for a good picture – and took some 100,000 of them

24 Nov 2020
The Lunar Roving Vehicle and James B. Irwin on the surface of the Moon on 31 July 1971 during the Apollo 15 mission (photograph: David R. Scott)

Who is responsible for heritage in outer space?

A new international agreement raises questions about what counts as cultural property in space, how it should be protected and who should do the protecting

23 Nov 2020
The Supper at Emmaus (c. 1530), Titian.

Are the Old Masters more indispensable than ever?

Caroline Campbell and Michael Prodger consider the particular forms of escape that historic paintings can offer in uncertain times

23 Nov 2020
La Chaîne Simpson (1896), Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. Art Institute of Chicago

Chain reaction – the art of bicycle racing

The invention of the modern bicycle in 1885 led to a whirl of enthusiasm for racing these new machines – and artists were swept up in the craze

21 Nov 2020
Simon Njami.

‘The future is certainly in Africa’ – an interview with Simon Njami

The writer and curator discusses his latest project at Art Abu Dhabi and how the contemporary art scene in Africa has changed in recent years

20 Nov 2020

Book of the Year

‘Bilderatlas Mnemosyne – The Original’ by Aby Warburg; Axel Heil and Roberto Ohrt (eds.)

19 Nov 2020
A Life Study: A Monk Sleeping against a Pile of Books

Digital Innovation of the Year

The Morgan, Connected

19 Nov 2020

Keeping it in the family – the neglect of Tunisia’s 19th-century heritage

An auction in Paris of a prominent Tunisian family’s heirlooms was stopped earlier this year, but the country’s heritage still needs better protection

17 Nov 2020
Agnes and Catherine Gund.

How Agnes Gund became an art-world hero

A documentary directed by her daughter sets out just why the collector and philanthropist is beloved by so many

16 Nov 2020

Monumental mutts and presidential pets

It has been a good week for outsize dogs in Turkmenistan and a huge week for good dogs in Delaware

15 Nov 2020
The discovery of the figure of a feline on a hillside in Nazca, Peru, was announced by the Peruvian Ministry of Culture on 15 October, 2010.

Curiosity about the cat – who drew a giant feline on a hillside in Peru?

The exciting recent discovery of a geoglyph in the Nazca desert poses many puzzles

13 Nov 2020

Book of the Year

The Age of Undress: Art, Fashion and the Classical Ideal in the 1790s Amelia Rauser Yale University Press This thought-provoking…

12 Nov 2020
Rose Horizontal (2018), Bridget Riley.

Lines of continuity – learning from Bridget Riley’s prints

An expanded catalogue raisonné of the artist’s prints sheds new light on her pioneering approach to colour and composition

11 Nov 2020
Langlands & Bell in the Library-Dining Room with Grand Tour (2020). Photo: Gareth Gardner

‘They show where the bodies are buried’ – Langlands & Bell at the Soane, reviewed

The duo’s wry installations uncover the realities architecture often hides – and examine how buildings can manipulate people

9 Nov 2020
Rashid Johnson, photographed in his studio in New York in 2020.

Escape artist – an interview with Rashid Johnson

The conceptual artist talks about his interest in unusual materials – and in what it means to ‘run’

8 Nov 2020

Tall tails – the miracle of Rotterdam

Rakewell reports on a remarkable fluke outside the Dutch city

6 Nov 2020
A view of the closed National Gallery in London in June 2020.

The week in art news – museums and galleries in England close in new lockdown

Museums and galleries in England are now closed under new national restrictions imposed to control the spread of Covid-19. These…

6 Nov 2020
Hard Rain Gon’ Come (2020), Christina Quarles.

‘My painting explores what it means to inhabit your own body’ – an interview with Christina Quarles

In her enigmatic paintings, the California-based artist explores the gap between our bodies and how they’re perceived

5 Nov 2020
The Refreshment Pavilion at Kew Gardens after it was burned down by suffragettes in February 1913.

Storm in a teacup – at Kew’s pavilion restaurant

The gardens’ latest restaurant occupies the site of their first refreshment pavilion – which has a surprisingly turbulent history

3 Nov 2020
Ntozakhe II, Parktown (detail; 2016), Zanele Muholi.

Zanele Muholi

The photographer’s unflinching images of post-apartheid South Africa go on show at Tate Modern

NOW CLOSED
Table (late 18th century), circle of Lorenzo Dolci.

What not to miss at TEFAF Online

With galleries encouraged to focus on a single masterpiece, this year’s online fair includes an array of museum-quality works

30 Oct 2020