How Adriano Pedrosa is opening up the Venice Biennale
The director of the 2024 Biennale talks to Apollo about the challenges the event faces and why he is sanguine about the changing political tides
The director of the 2024 Biennale talks to Apollo about the challenges the event faces and why he is sanguine about the changing political tides
The artists may have spoken about voids and infinities, but the market for their work has stayed satisfyingly solid
Now 20 years old, the country house museum in Warwickshire has developed a distinctive approach to collecting – and it’s paying off handsomely
The British-Nigerian artist is exhibiting new and old works at the Serpentine, in his first institutional show in London in two decades
Despite being separated by more than a century, the two photographers shared a distinctly hazy aesthetic
Do digital techniques to enliven familiar paintings help or hinder our understanding of the art at hand?
A new life of the auteur lays bare the obsessiveness behind his films and what it cost everyone around him
In documenting the damage humans have done to the planet, the photographer has created a disturbingly thrilling record of environmental disaster
A rustic painting by Annibale Carracci highlights how the act of eating in art has long been tied to class and status
Artists may distrust intermediaries but it would be more difficult for anyone to get noticed in the art world without them
As the Metropolitan Museum of Art enters a new era, its past decisions are still sending ripples into the present. So what does the future hold?
Plus: Denver Art Museum returns 11 more artefacts to Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam and some Damien Hirst sculptures may be more recently made than they seem
The godfather of Pop has designed a range of Budweiser cans – and he’s not the only creative type who has taken to drink
In the Turner Prize-winner’s first major show in Scotland in two decades, his sculptures are best viewed at something of a remove
Koen Bulckens of the Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp explains what makes the painter’s portrait of ‘the weeping prophet’ such an emotional tour de force
Jackie Wullschläger’s biography invites us to take another look at a painter whose canvases make a direct appeal to the eye
The Louvre has restored the Van Eyck masterpiece for the first time since it entered the museum in 1800
To mark the anniversary of Isadora Duncan’s first performance in Europe, we look at four artworks that immortalise the trailblazing dancer
The annual event provides plenty of artistic surprises and has much to offer to smaller collectors
A proposed statue of the author has caused a fuss among local residents, but does anyone really like public sculptures anyway?