Apollo

Unseen: The Lives of Looking by Dryden Goodwin

Dryden Goodwin’s enigmatic film grapples with history and identity

Fun and Games: 15th annual Serpentine Pavilion revealed

The Serpentine unveils plans for its summer pavilion

The Met brings out the best surprise at Asia Week New York

The Met steals the show at Asia Week New York

There’s more to Moore than his monumental sculptures

‘Back to A Land’ at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park looks at the finer points of Moore’s sculptural practice

Blinded by the Sun: The Age of Louis XIV

What is the cultural legacy of Louis XIV’s extravagant reign?

‘Now’s the Time’: Basquiat’s work at the Art Gallery of Ontario is still relevant

Few artists have garnered as much mystique in life and death as Jean Michel Basquiat

The Drawing Biennial is back

The fundraising exhibition and auction has emerged, somewhat paradoxically, as a highlight in the gallery’s programme

Can Iraq’s Antiquities be Saved?

What is the extent of the damage in Iraq and is enough being done by the international community?

Paper Trails: Salon Du Dessin

We’ve picked a few highlights from the world’s premier marketplace for drawings

London Diary: 22 March

Traces of the World Trade Centre in London; counterculturalism and Robert Fraser; and Hauser & Wirth’s space in Somerset

TEFAF Treasures

There are hundreds of exceptional artworks adorning the stands at TEFAF Maastricht this year. Everyone will have their own favourites,…

Muse Reviews: 22 March

George Vasey recommends Raoul de Keyser’s work in Edinburgh; Vanessa Remington introduces the art of the garden at the Queen’s Gallery; and ‘Classicicity’ explores ancient and modern art in tandem

The Week’s Muse: 21 March

Bardo museum shooting; Regional museums in crisis; Changing times for Helsinki’s museums; Richard Long on mud and mark-making; and art fair highlights

Work in Focus: Surreal subjects at ‘Classicicity’

Classical and contemporary collide at Breese Little gallery

Book Competition

‘Ravilious’ is published to accompany an upcoming exhibition at the Dulwich Picture Gallery

The Corning Museum of Glass unveils new contemporary galleries

The Corning’s new wing dedicated to new developments in glass art and design opens this week

Art Outlook: 19 March

Terror at the Bardo Museum; Syria recovers looted artefacts; Gabriele Finaldi joins the National Gallery; and a new CEO for Sotheby’s

Regional museums are in crisis. Can they survive?

Key speakers debated the issue at a Courtauld event this week

How should private collectors and public museums work together?

This year’s TEFAF Art Symposium looked at an old but not unproblematic relationship

Raoul De Keyser at Inverleith House

De Keyser’s great talent is to keep oppositional ideas in the balance

Terror attack at Tunisia’s Bardo Museum

Nineteen people are reported dead and more injured in an attack on the Tunis museum

TEFAF Treasures

An early Mondrian hidden among Old Masters; Auerbach’s striking self-portrait; and a curious Collector’s Cabinet

Richard Long: The Last Amateur

Nearly 50 years ago, Richard Long transformed a simple walk into a radical act. The artist talks to Apollo about mud and mark-making, his new prints, and why he can’t stop walking

TEFAF Treasures

Personal favourites from Maastricht, including an ancient Egyptian fragment and an unfinished old master painting