What is the point of the people in architectural drawings?
An exhibition at the Soane Museum shows that technical drawings of buildings are often more complex than they may seem
An exhibition at the Soane Museum shows that technical drawings of buildings are often more complex than they may seem
Art by the movement’s best-known practitioners still fetches huge sums, but it’s work by women and artists of colour that is really taking off
The wares on offer at the event this month are enough to bowl over any ceramics aficionado
If sales so far this year are anything to go by, the high-profile auctions taking place this month may not bring much excitement
This year’s laudably international line-up gives plenty of space to photography, performance and video
Seeing art is often a purely visual experience, but we shouldn't be afraid of exploring our other senses in the gallery
It seems as if arts criticism is becoming a treat for political journalists – but perhaps the job should be treated a little more seriously
The modernist building houses many significant works, but it’s the museum’s canny marketing and astute navigation of choppy political climates that really set it apart as it celebrates its 50th anniversary
The porcelain marvels produced in the 18th century combine opulence with naturalism to heart-stopping effect
By exhibiting <i>Two Figures in the Grass</i> the artist succeeded in attracting the controversy he was almost certainly courting
Paying hundreds of pounds for a dessert may seem excessive, but we wouldn’t think it an unreasonable price for a work of art
The Met’s return of a bronze statue to Thailand and the reaction in Cambodia shows the difficulty of recovering the origins of looted objects
The ancient Scottish relic makes for a captivating moment of theatre, but the rest of the displays are just as artfully done
Cultural institutions are increasingly cutting ties with fossil fuel sponsors, but art and oil have long been intertwined in surprising ways
The museum is founded on the collection of John Julius Angerstein and, 200 years later, the banker’s taste is still making itself felt
Wine has been part of the lifeblood of Crete since the Bronze Age – and one grower in particular is reaching back thousands of years for inspiration
Ahead of his Tate Britain commission, the artist tells Apollo about being inspired by Tupac and Cy Twombly and wanting to involve communities in everything he makes
Blake, Constable and Ivon Hitchens all feature in Alexandra Harris’s account of a place she knows well, but it’s the more obscure figures who really shine
In the late 1790s, modern women looking for new forms of freedom were often inspired by distant and mythical histories
In its telling of the story of the Mingei movement, the William Morris Gallery takes a refreshingly international approach
In the first half of the 15th century, artists drew on the Northern and Italian Renaissances to create a distinctly French cultural flowering
An exhibition in Venice of the French artist’s work is conceptually dense, but does it work in visual terms?