At the Movies: ‘Marty Supreme’

Michael Wood, 22 January 2026

Most of the characters in Marty Supreme believe their lives are a kind of movie, and when a character speaks of ‘theatre’ he is not talking about a building but about the agitated world he lives in....

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Diary: Brass Bands

Rachel Armitage, 22 January 2026

Many brass bands were started by factory owners in the belief that music would give their workers purpose, strengthen social bonds and discourage violence and disorder. Outside the industrial heartlands,...

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Faced with a parade of flushed Madonnas and anguished Christs, it would be easy to think that Fra Angelico was somehow apart from the intellectual and interdisciplinary advances we associate with the Renaissance....

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At the Museo Byron: Byron and Teresa

Clare Bucknell, 25 December 2025

What must it have been like to live cheek by jowl with the man you’d cuckolded? In the early 19th century, for a woman’s cavalier servente to occupy the same household as her husband was not uncommon,...

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Not Quite Music

Susannah Clapp, 25 December 2025

For Rimsky-Korsakov, the key of A was clear pink; for Scriabin, it was green. Duke Ellington read the flight patterns of birds as musical phrases and saw the D notes of his baritone saxophonist, Harry...

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To be a Garland fan is to have the illusion that you can save her from the wounds of the world, even as her voice and her eyes and her gloriously melodic laugh seem instead to be saving you.

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Diary: Louise Bourgeois’s Suitcase

Jo Applin, 25 December 2025

In September​, a suitcase filled with sculptural odds and ends was discovered beneath a spiral staircase in Louise Bourgeois’s house in Chelsea, New York. It had been tucked away behind a rail of clothes...

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A Kouros at the Met

T.J. Clark, 25 December 2025

It is one of the wonders of the world. You round a corner from the Met’s entrance hall and see the sculpture deep in a room to come, framed in a tall narrow door. Light hits the sculpture from the left...

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At the Movies: ‘Frankenstein’

Michael Wood, 4 December 2025

In all versions of the story a human competes with God by creating a living being. The difference in Guillermo del Toro’s version is that the creator doesn’t immediately freak out with horror when...

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Diary: Church Monuments

Nicholas Penny, 4 December 2025

To record the changing conventions of memorial sculpture is to trace the ways in which our ancestors affirmed their faith and stifled doubt, expressed their grief and placated guilt, contrived to assert...

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Marshall’s work stirs up thoughts that don’t settle. Here’s discursive jujitsu, a categorisation flipped backwards. Here’s an artistic contender intent to brand his act. Here’s a fresh and unfamiliar...

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On Jean Rhys

Susannah Clapp, 4 December 2025

For a long stretch of her long life, Jean Rhys was thought to be dead: drowned in the Seine, they said. For some of it she was thought to be a fraud. ‘I feel rather tactless being still alive,’ she...

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Rambunctious and often offensive, R. Crumb draws freely on pre-existing racial and gender stereotypes, and always draws in the first person. Unlike any previous comic-strip artist (but not unlike a stand-up...

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At Modern Two: Protest Photography

Daniel Trilling, 20 November 2025

Although the events depicted in Resistance are familiar territory for an exhibition concerned with social history – the Great De­pres­sion, postwar immigrat­ion, Greenham Common, the miners’ strike...

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On Nicholas Lanier

Alice Spawls, 6 November 2025

The portrait that I came across so unexpectedly at Frieze Masters doesn’t have the prestige of the Van Dyck or the special interest of the self-portrait, but it is the image that comes to mind whenever...

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Carl Gustav Carus made copies of paintings by Caspar David Friedrich, or sought out the locations he had painted, producing works that are so close to the originals that they were often mistaken for them....

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Hoodoo Man: Dr John and ‘Gris-Gris’

Francis Gooding, 6 November 2025

Beyond or beneath the theatrics there is a disconcerting sense that something much more serious is going on, that all the hokum and stage magic might be misdirection of the sort that enables something...

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Diary: What I Saw at the Movies

Leo Robson, 6 November 2025

Jean Epstein compared going to a movie to entering a state of hypnosis, an aesthetic experience that ‘modifies the nervous system’ much more than reading does. And it would be perverse to deny that...

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