Light, fire and smoke – an interview with Anthony McCall
Anthony McCall talks about sculpting with materials such as light and fire – on view in Wakefield and London
Anthony McCall talks about sculpting with materials such as light and fire – on view in Wakefield and London
An early 20th-century copy of a baroque chapel has been restored to its former glory
An extraordinarily ambitious attempt to map the city will set off as many arguments as it solves
George Henry Longly discusses his exhibition at the Palais de Tokyo, which features eight Japanese armours
Art news daily: 16 February
At the Ikon Gallery, two very different artists approach their subjects with remarkable empathy
Correcting Jasper Johns, Tory fossils, artists as cheeses, and, erm, a couple of cats stories
Art news daily: 12 February
Can T.S. Eliot’s poetic experiments be read alongside parallel developments in the visual arts? And how much has he influenced artists?
The Pinacoteca di Brera’s overlooked collection of modern Italian art gets a welcome outing in London
The paintings that Cornelius Gurlitt, son of a Third Reich art dealer, kept hidden for decades are now out in the open – so what happens next?
A recent government report says it should – but with limited public funding available, can Britain's existing museums grow?
Rasheed Araeen talks to Apollo about six-decades of making visually arresting and politically engaged art
Art news daily: 26 January
Bridget Riley’s monumental abstract paintings are as mysterious as they are mesmerising
The painter’s posthumously published memoir is a candid record of his obsessions
A new biography of Renoir emphasises the role the painter’s domestic life played in his work
The proposed loan of the Bayeux Tapestry has made for some, erm, creative threads on social media
The South African artist has made a virtue of taking his time to make slow but rewarding films and performance pieces
A museum retrospective charts James Rosenquist’s journey from billboard painter to Pop art pioneer