Judy Chicago: Revelations review – six decades of table-turning body politics
‘I put his matchstick men in the bin’: Lowry’s lost sketches go on display for first time
Beryl Cook/Tom of Finland review – ‘One’s trying to make you laugh, the other’s trying to make you horny’
‘Instead of a scream’: the Palestinian artist who does a Gaza drawing every day
April 2024
Claudette Johnson’s art for Cotton Capital nominated for Turner prize
Guardian-commissioned portrait of abolitionist Sarah Parker Remond among works competing for £25,000 prize
March 2024
Bruegel to Rubens: Great Flemish Drawings review – vital, intimate, exceptionally intense
So fragile that they are rarely seen in public, 120 of Flemish art’s finest drawings show you the minds and hands of the artists at work – chief among them the surprisingly dark and mysterious Rubens
‘Every single work is a masterpiece’: the once-in-a-lifetime exhibition of the greatest Flemish drawings
A new show brings together historic sketches from Bruegel to Rubens and more, capturing fleeting snapshots of everyday 16th- and 17th-century life
Do Ho Suh: Tracing Time review – an extraordinarily beautiful search for home
Is home a building, a place or a feeling, asks the Korean artist in an amazingly varied show of works on paper, film and those you can just drift through…
February 2024
South Korean convenience stores preserved in ink – in pictures
Artist Lee Me Kyeoung’s drawings of small shops document a community that is slowly vanishing
January 2024
Paintings, letters … and a John Lennon novel? Archive of ‘fifth Beatle’ Stuart Sutcliffe up for sale
Deanna Petherbridge obituary
Frank Auerbach’s early charcoal portraits look deep into human life – in pictures
Art meets nature in drawings pasted on the streets of Paris – in pictures
December 2023
Summer essentials
I tried to practise drawing but sketchbooks taught me what practice really meant
An expansive exhibition in San Francisco brings together the artist’s influential work, including five newly attributed pieces
Impressionists on Paper: Degas to Toulouse-Lautrec review – a show full of surprises
From Monet’s pastel sunsets to a beautifully bleak Van Gogh landscape and Pissarro’s summer orchard, the RA gathers fragile, rarely seen works, many made at speed, out and about and up close
Women’s Work Is Never Done review – decay, dildos and the disappeared enliven a great unravelling
Impressionists on Paper review – Van Gogh sets this rambling show on fire
Breathing, bushfires and ‘little bees’: children make art for the climate crisis – in pictures