Search results for: first look

Scavengers (1994), Paula Rego

Paula Rego paints a world of nightmares and secrets

Drawing on sources from Balzac to Disney, Rego’s pictures hint at narratives filled with mystery

14 Nov 2018
Volunteers dismantling the installation of Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red at the Tower of London in 2014.

The centenary of the Great War is over – but did artists and museums do it justice?

For four years, exhibitions and events throughout the UK have explored the art of remembrance – with varying results

14 Nov 2018
Creation, Ida O’Keeffe

Ida O’Keeffe: Escaping Georgia’s Shadow

The younger – and until now overlooked – O’Keeffe sister was a hugely talented artist in her own right

Dallas Museum of Art
NOW CLOSED

A bewitching history of magic at the Ashmolean

An ancient cow’s heart and a witches’ ladder are among the intriguing objects in this exploration of magical thinking

Panel depicting lobsters (1888), signed Shibata Zeshin. Christie’s, £662,500.

The lustre and allure of Japanese lacquer

In the last decade some exceptional pieces have sold for six-figure sums, but lacquerware is still good value for money

Cecily Brown photographed in her studio in New York in July 2018.

‘Now I can steal from myself as much as from other artists’ – an interview with Cecily Brown

The painter discusses her many influences and sources of inspiration, from the Old Masters to the YBAs

3 Nov 2018
The Scullery Maid (detail; c. 1738), Jean-Siméon Chardin. Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow

Pots, pans and pondering in Chardin’s domestic scenes

The 18th-century painter’s depictions of servants paused at work raise questions about the nature of attention

2 Nov 2018

What not to miss at Asian Art in London this year

Highlights from this year’s event prove that London remains a leading centre for Asian art worldwide

31 Oct 2018
The Bathing Posts, Brittany (1893), James McNeill Whistler.

How Whistler tamed nature in his landscape scenes

With the man-made world a strong presence in his Nocturnes, beach scenes and gardens, Whistler was no pure nature boy

31 Oct 2018
Nosferatu, Eine Symphonie Des Grauens (still; 1922), dir. F. W. Murnau.

Seven Halloween horror films for art historians

From Nosferatu to the Scream franchise – Apollo’s editors select some arty horror movies

30 Oct 2018
Stone inscription of early kufic script

Rethinking Islamic art at the British Museum

Two curators at the British Museum, Ladan Akbarnia and Venetia Porter, discuss the displays at the new Gallery of the Islamic World

29 Oct 2018
Peasant Dance, Pieter Bruegel

The sophisticated side of Pieter Bruegel the Elder

Bruegel may have painted many peasants, but he was one of the most complex – and urbane – artists of his day

27 Oct 2018
Herma with Bacchus for the Palazzo Borghese, Luigi Valadier

Luigi Valadier: Splendor in Eighteenth-Century Rome

The Italian silversmith looked to the art of ancient Rome to produce his altars, centrepieces and tableware

Frick Collection, New York
NOW CLOSED
John Rothenstein book jacket

John Rothenstein’s turbulent time at the Tate

The museum’s fifth director presided over a difficult period of its history, but left it in a better state than he found it

26 Oct 2018
Black Peter (detail), Joe Bradley

‘There’s something suspicious about painting’ – an interview with Joe Bradley

The painter talks about his attachment to black and the three-dimensional quality of his canvases

25 Oct 2018
Kutenai Duck Hunter, Edward S. Curtis

What’s in store at TEFAF New York Fall

Your guide to the best of the leading art and antiques fair, which returns to the Park Avenue Armory this week

24 Oct 2018

‘I find myself making growling noises while I’m painting’ – an interview with Walton Ford

The artist’s new body of work reimagines the life and times of the Barbary lion

24 Oct 2018
in the 1980s after its partial collapse in 1970 (photo: 2017)

The novelty and nostalgia of the Victorian seaside pier

The great iron structures of 19th-century Britain are important parts of the island’s cultural memory

23 Oct 2018
Anni Albers photographed at her weaving studio at Black Mountain College in 1937 by Helen M. Post, Photo: courtesy the Western Regional Archives, State Archives of North Carolina

Anni Albers weaves her magic at Tate Modern

A major exhibition devoted to the artist restores her – and the craft of weaving – to the heart of the modern movement

20 Oct 2018
The Veneration of St. Michael, Giuseppe Pietro Bagetti

Romanticismo

A look at the distinctive contribution made by 19th-century Italian artists to the Romantic movement

Gallerie d’Italia and Museo Poldi Pezzoli, Milan
NOW CLOSED
Laus Veneris, Edward Burne-Jones.

Edward Burne-Jones

How the Pre-Raphaelite artist looked to the medieval past to invent a new future for painting

Tate Britain, London
NOW CLOSED
Photo: Emiliano Barbieri/Emanuele Paganelli

‘Colour became the subject’ – Phoebe Unwin on her new series of paintings

The artist brightens up the Collezione Maramotti with paintings that blur the line between abstraction and figuration

19 Oct 2018
Aerial view of the Pavilions and Michael Heizer’s Compression Line (1968/2016).

A game-changing expansion for the Glenstone Museum

The reopened museum in Maryland raises the bar for what we can expect from private collections

16 Oct 2018
The City (still; 2018), Rossella Biscotti.

Digging down into Turkey’s Neolithic city

Communities past and present are explored in Rossella Biscotti’s film of the excavations at Çatalhöyük

13 Oct 2018