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European Realities
Eduard Ole. Passengers (Reisijad),1929. Art Museum of Estonia. Photo: Stanislav Stepaško.
The first of its kind, this vast show is a stunning tour of the realism movement of the 1920s and 30s, bringing together artists from across Europe
Maggi Hambling speaking to Studio International at Wolterton Hall, North Norfolk. Photo: Martin Kennedy.
Maggi Hambling’s new and highly personal installation, Time, in memory of her longtime partner, Tory Lawrence, opens the first arts and culture programme at Norfolk’s 18th-century Wolterton Hall as part of the exhibition Sea State.
Caspar Heinemann, Sod All, 2025. Installation view at Studio Voltaire. Images courtesy of the artist, Cabinet Gallery, and Studio Voltaire. Photo: Sarah Rainer.
The artist takes us on a deep, dark emotional dive with his nihilistic installation that references obscure religious books, occultism, folk revivalism and sexual politics through a typical mixture of found and repurposed materials.
Donald Locke: Resistant Forms, 2025. Installation view at Spike Island. Image courtesy the artist. Photo: Rob Harris.
Complex, multilayered paintings and sculptures reek of the dark histories of slavery and colonialism in the first major UK retrospective of the Guyanese British artist.
Rachel Jones: Gated Canyons, Dulwich Picture Gallery, 2025. Photo: Eva Herzog.
Shown in the context of the historic paintings of Dulwich Picture Gallery, Jones’s new paintings extend the iconography of the mouth in modern art.
William Mackrell.
His work has included lighting 1,000 candles and getting two horses to pull a car. Now, he is using his dismantled childhood bed in one show and dancing in overalls laden with coins in another. He explains his interest in blurring the boundaries between media, and what attracts him to performance art.
Marina Tabassum at the opening of A Capsule in Time, Serpentine Pavilion, London, 2025. Photo: Veronica Simpson.
The award-winning Bangladeshi architect behind this year’s Serpentine Pavilion on why she has shunned ‘flashy buildings with instant appeal’ and instead built a mosque and housing for refugees.
Diller Scofidio + Renfro (DS+R), V&A East Storehouse. © Hufton+Crow.
Diller Scofidio + Renfro has turned the 2012 Olympics broadcasting centre into a sparkling repository for the V&A’s collection. A new kind of statement building where the excitement is all on the inside, this hybrid of archive and museum an amazing building that foregrounds the visitor experience.
The Callas (Lakis and Aris Ionas). Punkthenon, 2022. Pedion tou Areos park / Plásmata 3, Athens, 2025. Photo: Pinelopi Gerasimou.
This nocturnal exhibition organised by the Onassis Foundation’s cultural platform transforms a public park in Athens into a space for encountering artworks at night.
Ruth Asawa: Retrospective, installation view, SFMOMA; artwork: © 2025 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc., courtesy David Zwirner; backdrop photograph: © 2025 Rondal Partridge Archives; Photo: Henrik Kam.
Three well-attended museum exhibitions in San Francisco flag a subtle shift from the current drumbeat of art thrown together in protest to a timeless aesthetic freed from agendas and concerns for diversity, equality, and strife to ravish the eye and stir the heart.
John Singer Sargent, Madame X (Madame Pierre Gautreau), 1883–84. Oil on canvas, 82 1/8 x 43 1/4in (208.6 x 109.9cm). Arthur Hoppock Hearn Fund, 1916. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
This dazzling exhibition on the centenary of John Singer Sargent’s death celebrates his versatile brilliance and enduring legacy.
Emma Critchley: Soundings. Presented in partnership with Attenborough Centre for the Creative Arts.
Through film, sound and dance, the artist’s continuing investigative project takes audiences on a journey to the deep, focusing on the environmental issue of deep-sea mining.
Nora Aurrekoetxea, AYO and Eniwaye Oluwaseyi, Rijksakademie, Amsterdam, 2025. Photos: Martin Kennedy.
At the Rijksakademie’s annual Open Studios event during Amsterdam Art Week, we spoke to three artists about the work they have produced during their residency.
Nora Aurrekoetxea speaking to Studio International at Rijksakademie Open Studios, Amsterdam. Photo: Martin Kennedy.
Nora Aurrekoetxea focuses on her home in Amsterdam, disorienting domestic architecture to ask us to contemplate the way it shapes us and ingrains itself in our bodies and psychology.
Eniwaye Oluwaseyi talking to Studio International at Rijksakademie Open Studios, Amsterdam. Photo: Martin Kennedy.
Eniwaye Oluwaseyi paints figures, including himself, friends and members of his family, within compositions that explore the transience of identity.
AYO talking to Studio International at Rijksakademie Open Studios, Amsterdam. Photo: Martin Kennedy.
AYO reflects on her upbringing and ancestry in Uganda from her current position as a resident of the Netherlands, using sculpture, sound and performance to create an in-between space of ambiguous, embodied translation.
Kiki Smith at the studio. Photo: Courtesy Pace Gallery.
Known for her tapestries, body parts and folkloric motifs, Kiki Smith talks about meaning, process, and why it’s important that a work should have enough in it to take care of itself.
Frank Auerbach. David Landau Seated, 1995. Oil on canvas, 26 x 26 in (66 x 66 cm). Private Collection. © The Estate of Frank Auerbach. Courtesy Michael Werner Gallery.
Britain’s greatest postwar painter has a belated German homecoming, which captures the remarkable presence of his work.
How Painting Happens (and why it matters) by Martin Gayford, published by Thames & Hudson. © Thames & Hudson
Martin Gayford’s engrossing book is a goldmine of quotes, anecdotes and insights, from why Van Gogh painted on tea towels to why some artists find it hard to start a work and others don’t know when to stop.
Jonathan Baldock: WYRD, Jupiter Artland. Photo: Neil Hanna.
As a Noah’s ark of his non-binary stuffed toys goes on show at Jupiter Artland, the artist talks about growing up gay in the 1980s, being working-class in the elite art world, and why experiencing art in person, in galleries and museums, is more important than ever.
Helen Chadwick, Piss Flowers, 1991-2. Installation at Frieze, 2013. © Estate of Helen Chadwick. Courtesy of Richard Saltoun Gallery, London, Rome and New York. Photo: Peter White.
Helen Chadwick’s unwillingness to accept any binary division of the world allowed her to radically explore the mechanisms of the body – physically, emotionally, sensually, sexually and sensorially.
Catharsis: A Grief Drawn Out by Janet McKenzie, published by Birlinn Limited, 2025.
To what extent can the visual language of grief be translated? Janet McKenzie looks back over 20 years’ worth of drawings in search of words.
Dame Jillian Sackler, 1940–2025. Photo: Miguel Benavides.
The art lover and philanthropist has died aged 84.
Charlotte Johannesson, Untitled, 1981–85, installation view, Radical Software: Women, Art & Computing 1960–1991, Kunsthalle Wien 2025. Courtesy the artist, Hollybush Gardens, London, and Croy Nielsen, Vienna. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
With more than 100 works by 50 artists, this show examines the pioneering role of women in computer art, looking at how our visual perceptions have evolved, the technological impacts on art and contrasts in artistic methods.
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