The artist’s videos and installations reinterpret acts of resistance staged in the streets and on social media
Guest curator Mami Kataoka tells the stories behind five highlights of her cosmic-inspired show
A recent exhibition in Athens highlighting Moore’s concern with light and the history of sculpture is part of a broader mission to shed new light, gradually, on his life and work
“Interwoven Power” uses a fresh curatorial lens to change the way viewers engage with Indigenous art
From tumultuous political events to countercultural visibility, Tate Britain show examines the 1980s through the work of Martin Parr, Chris Killip and many others
The sketch of Austin Friars Church throws fresh light on Vincent’s draftsmanship, suggesting he was even more of a late developer as an artist
Ambitious shows to open in Boston, Amsterdam, Tokyo...
'Between Contrail and Mountains' brings together works by 13 international artists evoking 'different ways of relating to our life here on Earth'
Leonardo’s largest known drawing was hung with the Mona Lisa in his studio, says Per Rumberg, the curator of the Royal Academy’s Florentine Old Masters exhibition opening this month
Featuring 82 works by 26 artists, this New York show tells the story of the short-lived style and its main protagonists
The artist has been researching flatbreads and tandoors, the community ovens where they are often baked, in countries around the world since 2020
In a new exhibition at the King's Gallery, over 160 works will explore how drawing “became the laboratory” for the new Renaissance style
The Art Newspaper's pick of the top shows to see around the world this month
The museum's latest exhibition explains and scrutinises democracy through objects spanning 2,500 years
This Venn diagram of a gallery exhibition leans into the ongoing confusion of the Los Angeles artists
Works in the artist’s show at the New York institution include a video installation in which he narrates a story of racially motivated violence told by his father against images of the actor Al Jonson in blackface
Reuniting the surviving sections of the city’s altarpiece marvel is just the start of this important, beautifully staged show at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art
Gauguin then went on to make a ceramic self-portrait with bleeding ears
Calle is famous for her examination of people’s personal lives—and her own—in an almost voyeuristic way. But, despite the title of her latest show, 'Overshare', she says her work exposes less than many people do on social media
Painter’s first London gallery show debuts three decades after she helped define China’s “New Generation”
Four international artists have made the shortlist for the award, worth £30,000
In its fourth iteration, Forever is Now continues its tradition of installing contemporary works next to ancient sites
The touring exhibition “Reproductive: Health, Fertility, Agency” features works that unflinchingly address infringements on bodily autonomy; its run has been cut short after a university gallery withdrew from its leg of the tour
The gallery will also bring Cecil Beaton’s fashion photography and cult magazine The Face to the fore
We name the London collector who parted with the painting
We find out what happened when the art world descended on Paris for Art Basel, speak to Guillermo Kuitca about his new work for Musée Picasso and hear from Małgorzata Mirga-Tas about June, her work soon to go on display at Tate St Ives
The exhibition “Grounded in Clay”, opening this month at the MFA Houston, was co-curated by the more than 60 members of the Pueblo Pottery Collective
From a canon-reshaping survey of Surrealism to an unearthing of the zombie myth
The Dutch artist’s famously restrained work will feature at the fair and major European dealer and institutional shows opening in October
Focusing on works by artists with ties to the American South, “Is It Real?” raises awareness and funds for reproductive rights for communities on the front lines