José da Silva
José da Silva is the Exhibitions Editor of The Art Newspaper
US artist was first of New York group to create large-scale paintings—before Jackson Pollock
From the Deutsche Börse photography prize to Rockefeller's collection including Gauguin and Picasso
From the glitz and glamour of ocean liners to post-Brexit politics by the official election artist Cornelia Parker
House-museum in Cambridge now has “world-class” conditions for future exhibitions, says its director
From photographs of real northern soul to Lydia Ourahmane's golden teeth and trembling floor
From a triumphant show of Charles I's collection at the Royal Academy to an Andreas Gursky retrospective at the revamped Hayward Gallery
From a huge light show across the city to the final week of Rachel Whiteread's retrospective
Third edition of art-fair alternative and new exhibition model opens this weekend
From Michael Armitage’s powerful Gauguin-like scenes at the South London Gallery to Marguerite Humeau's hypnotic installation at Tate Britain
From the Merrie Monarch's display of power at the Queen's Gallery to a family-friendly Winnie-the-Pooh show at the Victoria and Albert Museum
The British artist has unveiled Sixty Minute Spectrum (2017), a new light installation incorporating the London gallery’s distinctive roof
From Rose Wylie’s parade of footballers and royalty to Arthur Jafa’s powerful video collage of African-America culture
Event coincides with the city's tricentennial next year
From Pussy Riot's immersive penal colony installation to a final chance to see Francis Kéré’s Serpentine Pavilion
From the British Museum's Lion Man to Matisse's studio studies at the Royal Academy
Works are from City of Oslo Art Collection, which has pieces displayed in around 1,000 locations throughout the Norwegian capital
Nothing is quite black and white at the National Gallery, while Marie Jacotey’s enigmatic illustrations provide further mysteries
From Cézanne’s ballsy portraits to a Tove Jansson survey showing that she was much more than Moomin’s mother
Ian Cheng, Jasper Johns's potter and the most Insta friendly art at the fair
The unlikely friendship of Dalí and Duchamp is explored at the RA, while Superflex turn Tate Modern into a playground
Peter Blake complementary tote bags flew off Waddington Custot's shelves
The Danish collective’s new commission extends beyond the cavernous space of Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall
From slick and surreal photographs at the Serpentine to art in canal boats for the Art Licks Weekend
From a live band that are ‘The Art’ to dripping taps and nuclear explosions, this edition of the biennial is making a racket
From Rachel Whiteread’s mummified air to the burial rituals of the mysterious Scythians
From Giacometti’s reunited Women in Venice to an exploration of bird nests and egg collecting
London institution will also host shows on Klimt and Schiele, Charles I and Tacita Dean as part of its 250th anniversary year
The town has been slowly blossoming into a hub for art since the establishment of the triennial, and the fourth edition hopes to continue this trend