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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
  • Oscar Murillo 2209, (untitled) surge, 2022, 150 x 150 cm

    Modernist Paris, a Monet adventure park and the death of life drawing – the week in art

    Oscar Murillo turns Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall into an epic painting garden, while Goshka Macuga delves into ancient archeology, and the Paris of 1924 is revisited, which is the last time it held the Olympics
  • Detail from Leonora Carrington, Woman with Fox bronze sculpture against a mustard yellow background

    A very British surrealist and the Tories’ legacy in cartoons – the week in art

    Drift inside Leonora Carrington’s strange dreams while Ben Jennings parodies 14 years of political failure in a graphic Rake’s Progress – all in your weekly dispatch
  • 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
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