The ‘grim’ social housing that has proved more robust than what followed it
George Peabody's vision lives on, and we would do well to heed it today
George Peabody's vision lives on, and we would do well to heed it today
What can museums do to deter would-be Thomas Crowns – and what are the risks they run rather more regularly?
Leighton House proves a perfect backdrop for a remarkable collection of drawings
Art News Daily : 23 February
If anything, the corporation should be taken to task for its desperate bid for accessibility
The octogenarian's first solo show in a UK institution is a riot of colour and character
Christo and his wife and collaborator Jeanne-Claude wanted to walk on water nearly 40 years ago. The Floating Piers project this summer will achieve their dream.
The Cornish pasty museum and now booking: Van Gogh's bedroom on Airbnb
The fear of nuclear disaster haunted the forms and materials of post-war sculpture
Art News Daily : 12 February
Review of a groundbreaking study of overlooked 20th-century scholars
An intriguing exhibition in Milan questions which side of a painting we should pay attention to
Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst are building and burrowing in London – but at what cost, asks Rakewell
‘What’s happened to the witch, the German puppet witch?’ Susan Hiller enquires of the waitress...
Towne's watercolours aren't as ground-breaking as they were once made out to be, but they are definitely good enough to merit a revival
Not-so-radical street art and the Cerne Abbas giant censored at the Palace of Westminster
Were this week's sales a true reflection of the market, minus the smoke and mirrors of third-party guarantees?
Art News Daily : 3 February
Rakewell ponders why an airport would install an artist in residence
Julia Margaret Cameron's photographs are some of the most hauntingly original of the 19th century.