Apple News

Live like Kendall Roy, if you have $29m to spare (or like Roman for $38m)

Succession fans with millions to spend can now live like the Roy brother of their choice (as ever, that doesn’t include Connor)

23 Apr 2023

The week in art news – Texan princess evicted from 16th-century Roman villa

Plus: photographer turns down Sony prize after winning with AI-generated image and Artcurial expands into Switzerland

23 Apr 2023

Baroque in Florence

The Bozar in Brussels shows that in Florence, the style was considerably more refined than in Rome

21 Apr 2023

Isaac Julien: What Freedom Is To Me

The film-maker’s lyrical explorations of race and cultural history go on show at Tate Britain

21 Apr 2023

A Century of Dining Out: The American Story in Menus, 1841–1941

The Grolier Club serves up a feast of menus that tell us much about changing social mores

21 Apr 2023

Printed in 1085: The Chinese Buddhist Canon from the Song Dynasty

The Huntington presents a rare opportunity to view the oldest printed book in its collection

21 Apr 2023

What’s the point of studying fine art?

Enrolment in the humanities is tumbling across the United States, but the numbers for fine art are still holding up

21 Apr 2023

Will Edward Bawden’s lost masterpiece ever be found?

The hunt is on for an epic mural depicting ‘Country Life in Britain’ – but chances are it’s a wild goose chase

21 Apr 2023

4 things to see: Earth Day

How artists have used their practice to document climate change and reflect on our relationship to our planet

21 Apr 2023
Portrait of Sarah Bernhardt (detail; 1876), Georges Clairin.

How Sarah Bernhardt stole the heart of Paris

Nobody embodied the glitz and glamour of the fin-de-siècle quite like ‘La Divine’, as a lavish show at the Petit Palais proves

20 Apr 2023

Just Stop Oil’s big break

The climate protestors have copped a lot of flak for taking on the snooker – but at least it makes a change from museums

20 Apr 2023

Family fortunes – ‘The Rossettis’, reviewed

The Tate does a decent job of bringing the Rossetti women to the fore – but it still lets Gabriel run away with the show

19 Apr 2023

Why Laurie Anderson is still looking at the world sideways

The performance artist has struck an uneasy balance between fact and fiction in her work for more than five decades

19 Apr 2023

How modern artists caught the doodle bug

A compelling exhibition in Paris proves that scrawling and scribbling have long been a way for artists to let go

18 Apr 2023

In the studio with… Maki Na Kamura

The Japanese painter works to the sounds of birds chirping and receives regular visits from figures from the past

17 Apr 2023

Dosso Dossi’s scenes from the Aeneid are a Roman triumph

Reuniting the surviving works from the painter’s ‘Frieze of Aeneas’ series allows us to imagine one of the great Renaissance ensembles more clearly

16 Apr 2023

Newcastle’s Side Gallery is too important to stay closed

The gallery founded by the Amber Collective is a champion of documentary photography, strongly rooted in the local area, and deserves all the support it can get

16 Apr 2023

Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith: Memory Map

The Whitney puts on the most comprehensive exhibition of the artist’s work to date

14 Apr 2023
Ateneum Art Museum

Finnish lines – a new look for the Ateneum in Helsinki

Finland’s most important art museum has been completely rehung just as questions of culture and national identity are on everyone’s mind

14 Apr 2023
David Garrick with his wife Eva-Maria. (detail; c. 1757–64), William Hogarth.

Style & Society: Dressing the Georgians

The Queen’s Gallery in London puts on a courtly fashion show

14 Apr 2023

Moï Ver

The photographer documented Jewish communities throughout Eastern Europe from the late 1920s to the start of Second World War

14 Apr 2023
The Ten Largest, Group IV, No. 3, Youth, Hilma af Klint. Courtesy the Hilma af Klint Foundation

Hilma af Klint & Piet Mondrian: Forms of Life

The Tate considers how both artists used abstract painting as a means of understanding the natural (and supernatural) world

14 Apr 2023
Sinking of titanic painting

4 things to see: the sinking of the Titanic

A telegram sent from the ship and a tobacco pipe owned by a junior engineer are among our pick of objects not to miss this week

14 Apr 2023
Photo: Yu Yigang; courtesy the Gilbert & George Centre; © Gilbert & George

Could Gilbert & George keep going forever?

The self-styled ‘living sculptures’ have long been an east London fixture – and they’ve just opened a new centre in a bid to stick around even after they’re gone

12 Apr 2023