PREMIUM

Gold Icon Treasure House Fair harnesses the spirit of summer

Now in its third year, the London fair blends fine art with a festival atmosphere that suits the season

23 Jun 2025

Gold Icon How Jenny Saville turns paint into flesh

In her depictions of the human form, the artist pushes paint to its limits, explains Sarah Howgate of the National Portrait Gallery in London

21 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Just the bare necessities of art

The idealised nude figure has an unshakeable place in art history, but artists have also turned their gaze to their own imperfect bodies

19 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Can art survive the AI juggernaut?

In this stylish polemic, the artist Hito Steyerl casts AI image-making as bland at best and exploitative at worst

16 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Contemporary art gets a glorious new home at Goodwood

The Duke of Richmond has been filling the grounds of his Sussex estate with sculpture, and the results are a breath of fresh air

14 Jun 2025

Gold Icon The prints that take us on a picturesque tour of Japan

Hiroshige’s playful prints conjure the landscapes of 19th-century Japan in jewel-like tones

12 Jun 2025

Gold Icon The UAE’s art market is on the up

With a slew of new projects and major government investment, the Emirati art scene is having a moment. This time, it looks set to last

10 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Surround-sound art finds a perfect home in Portugal

A former monastery is an apt setting for the eerie installations of Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller

9 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Elizabeth I’s favourite kitchen utensil

The Virgin Queen was not known for her cookery skills, so why was she often painted holding a sieve?

7 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Isles be back – in New Haven

Housed in Louis Kahn’s last building, the newly spruced-up Yale Center for British Art reframes Paul Mellon’s collection

5 Jun 2025

Gold Icon When Frida Kahlo met Mary Reynolds

Revisiting a meeting of the two Surrealists in Paris in 1939 sheds new light on the movement as a whole

4 Jun 2025

Gold Icon The Met’s Rockefeller Wing now stands taller than ever

The museum’s refurbished galleries of art from Africa, Oceania and the Americas now have the prominence they deserve

3 Jun 2025

Apollo at 100

As the magazine marks its centenary, its belief in being curious about both the past and present – and in the power of art – is more important than ever

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon The twist and turns in Ruth Asawa’s reputation

The artist mixed making abstract sculpture with populist public commissions. As her reputation soars, her generosity of spirit is as apparent as her inventiveness

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Civic virtues and vices in Renaissance Siena

One of history’s most mysterious political paintings might hold lessons for our own time – if we could make out the meaning

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon A brief history of Apollo’s cameo appearances

A personal tally of finding the magazine’s readers in films, television and fiction – and among the Rolling Stones

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Up and away – the art of the Ascension

Depictions of Christ’s ascent to heaven often manage to be both deadly serious and upliftingly silly

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Vanessa Bell deserves higher billing in the Bloomsbury Group

It was the painter’s misfortune to be surrounded by writers whose accounts of her have been too dominant for too long

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Amédée Ozenfant, the purest of the Purists

The French artist believed in his paintings being stylistically uniform and infinitely replicable – an idea that, a century on, has not done him any favours

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Has the QR code had its day?

Though museums use them to provide more information, QR codes can conceal as much as they reveal

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Why Gertrude Stein’s home was the first museum of modern art

In Paris, the American writer and her siblings were early patrons of the likes of Matisse and Picasso, making their Left Bank apartment a magnet for art lovers

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon Commemorative ceramics: not just for special occasions

Collectors of ceramics marking great battles, royal weddings and even Acts of Parliament are rare but dedicated

Gold Icon The Basque Country vineyard with an altar to wine

Nestled just south of the Pyrenees, Bodega Otazu is home to its very own ‘Catedral del Vino’, as well as a 2,000-strong collection of contemporary art

2 Jun 2025

Gold Icon The fine art of magazine advertising

A look back at Apollo’s commercial pages through the decades reveals shifts in consumer tastes – as well as some distinctly quirky offerings

2 Jun 2025