Showing 2,341–2,360 of 3,512 results
It's all true: The World as a Stage II
Co-curators of the ɫشý exhibition, ask some of the participating artists about its themes
A kiss across the ages: Barnett Newman
The older man in the photograph was Barnett Newman, unexpectedly being kissed by the youngster Michael Auder. Carter Ratcliff looks …
Lumps, bumps, bulbs, bubbles, bulges, slits, turds, coils, craters, wrinkles and holes
Literary critic and feminist, Elaine Showalter explores the life and work of artist Louise Bourgeois.
Memory frames: Tate Archive
Iain Sinclair visits the Tate archive and unearths the images of a photographer ‘trembling on the brink of life and …
MicroTate 11
No questions please: Louise Bourgeois
For many years Louise Bourgeois conducted a monthly salon from her house in New York. It was a chance to …
Other worlds: William Blake
William Blake famously declared: “I must create a system or be enslaved by another man’s.” His visionary work is on …
Play on: The World as a Stage
To coincide with the forthcoming The World as a Stage exhibition at ɫشý, Marie de Brugerolle explores how contemporary …
Poetic encounters: Millais's Chill October
Many of Millais’s late landscapes in Scotland were painted en plein air and given titles inspired by his favourite poems. …
R.I.P.: Henry Lamb's 'Death of a Peasant'
George Shaw sketched his father for several decades, until his death last year. Prompted by a visit to the Tate …
Strangely familiar: Norma Jeane
Norma Jeane is the alias of an artist who never appears in public and has no studio, using Marilyn Monroe’s …
Voice of the invisible: Doris Salcedo
The social, historical and political landscape of Colombia and beyond has deeply informed the work of the artist who is …
Where the wild things are: Animals
When Chinese artist Huang Yong Ping was forced to expel the beasties that inhabited his Theater of the World he …
'You look charming. You look enchanting. You look dazzling. You look breathtaking. You look unique. But you don't make an evening.: Art & theatre
‘Since visual art practice has so decisively repudiated, problematised, complicated the whole business of pretending’, says Nicholas Ridout, ‘it's hardly …
'All artists are not chess players – all chess players are artists' Marcel Duchamp: Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia II
To coincide with the first exhibition to explore the inter-relationship between Duchamp, Man Ray and Picabia at ɫشý, Allan …
Colour fields: In the studio
Rose Hilton talks about her selection of works for her exhibition at Tate St Ives.
Dealing joyously with gross material facts: The Camden Town Group
Modern Painters: Sickert's famous dictum heralded a move towards a gritty realism in British painting
Graceful enigmas: Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia
Appreciations on Duchamp, Man Ray and Picabia by Jacqueline Matisse Monnier, T.J. Demos, George Baker and Kim Knowles.
Living with Niki: Niki de Saint Phalle I
The French-born artist who died in 2002 is perhaps best known for her large, brightly coloured sculptures of female figures, …