Shōji Hamada: A Japanese Potter in Ditchling
This show explores the works, friendships and shared practices of Shōji Hamada and Bernard Leach as...
Tune in to being a tree, explore the world through the ‘eyes’ of a potato … Rather than dwelli...
Sussex Landscape: Chalk, Wood and Water
With an outstanding collection of work from JMW Turner to Eric Ravilious to Wolfgang Tillmans, this ...
Strange Clay: Ceramics in Contemporary Art
Expect the unexpected from this exuberant show of ceramic fine art, filled as it is with fantastical...
The Artist’s Studio: A Cultural History – book review
Hall’s accounts of the changing nature of artists’ studios from Greek antiquity onwards are enth...
Shi Jinsong: Waiting for a response which we might never get
With his tree motorbikes modelled on Harley-Davidsons and bamboo fashioned from metal, Shi Jinsong s...
Stephen Willats: Social Resource Project for Tennis Clubs
In the 1970s, Stephen Willats worked with four socially disparate tennis clubs in Nottingham in a pa...
Sámi Pavilion (Nordic Countries), Venice Biennale 2022
Sámi artists Anders Sunna, Máret Ánne Sara and Pauliina Feodoroff have transformed the Nordic Pav...
The theme of the 17th Istanbul Biennial is composting, the idea being to seed a multitude of communi...
Sturtevant: Dialectic of Distance
On the 55th anniversary of Sturtevant’s radical re-creation of Claes Oldenburg’s The Store, Thad...
Sascha Wiederhold: Rediscovery of a Forgotten Artist
The great museum of modern German art reintroduces the world to Sascha Wiederhold, chronicler of Wei...
The Real and the Romantic: English Art Between Two World Wars – book rev...
Art historian and biographer Frances Spalding leads us through a complex period in the development o...
Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven was once described as an artist who ‘dresses dada, loves dad...
In her works on paper, photographs and bronzes, the young British Ghanaian artist conjures up memori...
The Queens’ Jubilee! and Let Me Hold You
Marking the 50th anniversary of the UK’s first Gay Pride March, two exhibitions come together in a...
Stalin’s Architect: Power and Survival in Moscow – book review
This fascinating book is as much about the history of Stalinist Russia as it is about Boris Iofan, t...
Sigurður Guðjónsson: Perpetual Motion – Venice Biennale 2022
In the darkness of the Icelandic Pavilion, Sigurður Guðjónsson talks about his monumental video w...
From her small woven minimes to installations that stretch from floor to ceiling, Sheila Hicks’s c...
Sophie Calle and her guest Jean-Paul Demoule: The Ghosts of Orsay
Through photographs, text and objects, Sophie Calle weaves a tale about the time she spent staying i...
Things Will Continue to Change …
Two years after the first Covid-19 lockdown in the UK, eight artists show how they have adapted to t...
Tomás Saraceno: Particular Matter(s)
This show is a marvel of art and science in which Tomás Saraceno literally draws you into his web t...
What would a monument to Britain in 2022 look like? A motley crew of artists provide some surprising...
Shahzia Sikander – interview: ‘I usually create a painting as a poem’
Shahzia Sikander talks about the problems surrounding the telling of any history, and how collaborat...
The World According to Colour: A Cultural History – book review
Oddly, a squashed fly triggered art historian James Fox’s fascination with colour and, in this amb...
Through paintings, film and drawings, Sarah Morris explores time and space, and her fascination with...
Tunji Adeniyi-Jones – interview: ‘I want to show composure and a confi...
Tunji Adeniyi-Jones talks about his new paintings in That Which Binds Us, his first solo show at Whi...
The Courtauld Institute refurbishment – review: ‘A bit of an epiphany...
After a three-year, £57m restoration and refurbishment by the Stirling-Prize winning architects Wit...
If you still think of tapestry as a traditional craft, the range of subjects and techniques in the w...
Suzanne Valadon: Model, Painter, Rebel
Born into poverty, this extraordinary and spirited woman rose to become a critically acclaimed paint...
The boundaries between painting and sculpture are blurred in Sze’s works, where pictures within pi...