Apollo

Frick Collection’s next director is Royal Academy’s Axel Rüger

Plus: the Netherlands returns 288 objects seized from Indonesia during colonial rule; and LACMA postpones opening new building to visitors to 2026

Edges of Ailey

The dance pioneer’s life, work and influences are a revelation at the Whitney Museum of American art this autumn

Asian Bronze

Four millennia of craftsmanship are celebrated in this show at the Rijksmuseum, which brings together 75 impressive objects – many of which are making their European debut

Silk Roads

More than 300 objects from the first millennium AD demonstrate the importance of cultural and material exchange across Asia, Africa and Europe

Paula Rego: Power Games

There are no fairy-tale endings in the powerful narrative paintings and sculptures on show at the Kunstmuseum Basel

Justice for Moo Deng, the internet’s favourite hippo

The rapid rise to fame of a baby pygmy hippopotamus in Thailand has raised concerns about her well-being – and about who will own her image rights

Four things to see: Sculpture and landscape

Sculptures and their natural surroundings can shape each other in subtle and sometimes visually stunning ways, as these four artworks demonstrate

The Mothercare founder with the Midas touch

As the collection of Renaissance silver Selim Zilkha formed with his wife Mary comes to auction, his children Michael and Nadia recall their father’s dazzling hobby

London’s most modern building looks to the future

The BT Tower floats above the city, a reminder of 1960s optimism and a faith in technology that is in short supply today

The Andalusian winery that pairs sherry with Spanish paintings

The veteran sherry-makers at Bodegas Tradición in Cádiz may have perfected their craft, but the winery’s collection of paintings by great Spanish artists is no less impressive

The endlessly debatable virtues of Dosso Dossi

The mystery surrounding the meaning of an allegorical painting by Dosso Dossi may be precisely its point, explains the curator Pierre Curie

Master of art – the towering legacy of David Sylvester

Born 100 years ago this month, the critic exerted an outsize influence on artists and tastemakers alike – and he still has much to teach us

What lies in store for the French art market?

Despite what is widely regarded as a lucky escape in July’s elections, further challenges may well lie on the horizon

The unconventional wisdom of Eileen Agar

The British Surrealist’s colourful account of a long and eventful career is back in print, and her deep commitment to her work couldn’t be clearer

Hans/Jean Arp & Sophie Taeuber-Arp

These versatile makers – one of the most influential couples of the 20th-century art world – are the subject of a major retrospective in Brussels

We Live in Painting: The Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art

The importance of colour to Mesoamerican art and society is the subject of this show, which includes ancient objects as well as work by contemporary Indigenous colourists

Glenn Ligon: All Over the Place

The American artist brings word art to the Fitzwilliam in a sprawling retrospective that makes creative use of the museum’s permanent collection

The Reflected Self: Portrait Miniatures, 1540–1850

Compton Verney celebrates what was once one of the most popular art forms in Britain, proving that size really doesn’t matter

‘This bird’s a doofus’ – the unlikely charms of a featherbrained friend

When Jonathan Lethem picked up an innocuous old painting of a cormorant for $50, he didn’t know it would become a companion for life

Elizabeth Bennet gets a strange new lease of life

Visitors to Jane Austen’s House will soon be able to ‘meet’ the popular Pride and Prejudice character, but will her avatar make a good first impression?

Glenn Lowry to step down as MoMA director after 30 years

The museum’s longest serving director is leaving in 2025; plus the artist Rebecca Horn has died at the age of 80, and the Italian culture minister has resigned after hiring his lover as an advisor

Will the Glasgow School of Art ever be rebuilt?

Six years after the devastating fire, Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s masterpiece is no closer to being restored. What can possibly explain the delay?

Lina Iris Viktor strikes gold at the Soane Museum

The artist has made a series of works that stand up to the space – and are attention-grabbing in their own right

Piecing together ancient Rome, one fragment at a time

At the new museum of the Forma Urbis, slabs of the famous map of the city now lie literally beneath visitors’ feet