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Art Weekly newsletter

Your weekly art world low-down, sketching out news, ideas and things to see this week. Sign up to the newsletter here
  • Barbie: The Exhibition at the Design Museum in London.

    Barbie graces London and the Rokeby Venus heads to Liverpool – the week in art

    Plus Dominique White’s subaquatic sculptures, Lonnie Holley’s salvaged objects and a new Rembrandt at the British Museum – all in your weekly dispatch
  • Sharpening the Saws by Oleksandr Bohomazov, 1927.

    Giants of Ukrainian art, Henry Moore goes to war and Chris Ofili’s myth making – the week in art

    A showcase of modernist greats from Malevich to Delaunay, the Yorkshire sculptor’s Blitz drawings and Ofili’s tapestry returns home to Scotland – all in your weekly dispatch
  • a detail of Protection, 2024, by Claudette Johnson.

    Blue Black portraits, electric light relief and sugar in space – the week in art

    Claudette Johnson’s intimate observations, Anthony McCall’s gleaming geometry and Tavares Strachan’s rocket launch – all in your weekly dispatch
  • Two girls kissing by Peggy Nolan featuring in Meditations on Love at the Photographers’ Gallery.

    Love through the lens, a dynasty of Japanese printmaking and Leeds’s finest – the week in art

    The Yoshida family’s remarkable legacy, Alison Wilding’s subtle and surprising sculptures and this year’s rather tired effort from the Royal Academy
  • Gavin Jantjes, Freedom Hunters, 1977.

    Anti-apartheid art, Keith Haring graffiti and new life for fallen trees – the week in art

    A retrospective of South African artist Gavin Jantjes, new works by Zanele Muholi and Charles Lutyens’ insights as an art therapist
  • Matthew Barney, Field Panel, featuring in London Gallery Weekend.

    Degas at the circus, Emin’s rebirth and rococo inspo – the week in art

    Richard Wright hits Glasgow, London Gallery Weekend brings the glamour and fashion photography claims its place as art
  • Ed Clark’s Locomotion, 1963.

    American action, blockbusting birds and Alvaro Barrington’s gallery takeover – the week in art

    A forgotten star from the golden age of abstraction, avian amazements and new ideas in a grand neoclassical hall – all in your weekly dispatch
  • Judy Chicago In the Beginning from Birth Project (detail), 1982 Prismacolor on paper 65 x 389 in. (165.1 x 988.06 cm)

    Judy Chicago’s illuminated epic, Elton John’s best shots and an earshredding blast – the week in art

    The manuscript behind the US feminist’s monumental Dinner Party is finally published, Elton’s photography obsession returns and some woodcuts warn of disaster
  • A detail from Claude Monet’s The Water-Lily Pond, 1899, … on loan for the exhibition National Treasures.

    Treasures on tour, outsized orchids and liberated bottoms – the week in art

    Monet’s masterpiece flees the National Gallery, Marc Quinn plants himself in Kew and the Tate honours female artists – all in your weekly dispatch
  • Sculptor Tony Cragg poses with some of his works installed at Castle Howard, near Malton.

    X-ray visions, stately sculptures and swelling seas – the week in art

    Tony Cragg’s cosmic forms grace a Yorkshire manor, while the Lion of the Punjab roars back to life – all in your weekly dispatch
  • The punishment of Tityus by Michelangelo.

    Hairy paint, boozy sculpture and Michelangelo’s final years – the week in art

    The Renaissance master dazzles, Rasheed Araeen goes for drinks and Peppi Botrop really mixes media – all in your weekly dispatch
  • In the Rain by Franz Marc, 1912.

    Expressionists turn blue, Gormley gardens and Rauschenberg reaches out – the week in art

    Pioneering German modernists, a stately new setting for Britain’s best-known sculptor and Rauschenberg’s utopian cultural exchange
  • Caravaggio’s The Martyrdom of Saint Ursula, 1610.

    Death-defying darkness, thought-provoking pop art and unrepentant nudes – the week in art

    Caravaggio proves haunting, Yinka Shonibare brings colonial figures down to size and Monica Sjöö photographs the goddess feminism – all in your weekly dispatch
  • You Too Could Be the Life and Soul of Any Party (detail), by Philippa Brown, on show at Jerwood Survey III.

    Artists of the future, Ghanaian kings’ robes and a tiny moth – the week in art

    Amateur artists join the pros in Gateshead, Old Master pastiches go on show in London, and a bursary for young photographers is launched in memory of the Guardian’s Eamonn McCabe – all in your weekly dispatch
  • Horn of plenty … a tapestry fragment from Flanders, c1500.

    Artistic unicorns, protest ceramics and queer art from Morocco – the week in art

    Greenham Common inspires a new generation, designer Enzo Mari gets playful and Perth Museum dedicates its first exhibition to a mythical beast prized since antiquity
  • Joannes Fijt, Study of a Dog.

    Intense photographic visions, a journey to Rome and a dealer-turned-painter – the week in art

    A wealth of northern Renaissance drawings; photographers Julia Margaret Cameron and Francesca Woodman, and recognition for gallerist Betty Parsons – all in your weekly dispatch
  • My World Was Broken Because of You by Tracey Emin, 2024.

    Play-Doh photos, Emin’s studio show and Munch-drunk love – the week in art

    Plus 500 years worth of children land in Derbyshire and a baroque zealot flatters his King in oil paint – all in your weekly dispatch
  • Film still of Unity Hall, Knust, Kumasi by John Owuso Addo and Miro Marasović as seen in Tropical Modernism at the V&A.

    A tropical storm, an ancient sisterhood and Toni Morrison sculptures – the week in art

    Postcolonial architecture in Ghana, fresh responses to an all-female medieval community and sculptures inspired by radical writing
  • Martin Boyce Dead Star (Reclining), 2017.

    Martin Boyce meditates, Angelica Kauffman returns and Enninful celebrates Mapplethorpe – the week in art

    Everyday objects are imbued with beauty by the Glasgow artist, while France celebrates the 150th birthday of impressionism
  • Father Stretch My Hands (detail) by Nathaniel Mary Quinn, 2021.

    Black identity, Blake’s intensity and how to dust David – the week in art

    Plus splashy colourful paintings, Korean colour pencil drawings and Yoko Ono’s huge retrospective – all in your weekly dispatch
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