At the MK: Gerard Byrne

Brian Dillon, 31 March 2011

‘About twelve noon on 13 November 1951, at a distance of about 200 yards, two distinct humps … something like a couple of ducks, not anything like a porpoise, or a walrus, or a whale,...

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At the National Gallery: Jan Gossaert

Peter Campbell, 17 March 2011

The Three Kings in Jan Gossaert’s Adoration of the Kings are lavishly dressed and richly supplied with gifts. The building in which they have discovered the Nativity is a handsome ruin. The...

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Academics: beware of loving what you write about. Fandom can tempt intellectuals to take uncharacteristic risks with their primary sources. Even Stanley Fish, who as the author of Is There a Text...

Read more about Save it for HBO: Stanley Fish and ‘The Fugitive’

Over the last decade or so critical theory has seen a marked turn to questions of ‘bare’ and ‘creaturely’ life. Why this interest in such threshold states? What’s at...

Read more about I am the decider: Agamben, Derrida and Santner

At Tate Britain: ‘Watercolour’

Peter Campbell, 3 March 2011

I don’t remember when I was first irritated by that children’s rhyme, which is wrong twice over. Oil painting may well be hard but in some ways it’s easier than painting in...

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At the Movies: ‘Les Diaboliques’

Michael Wood, 3 March 2011

‘Don’t be diabolical,’ a title card says at the end of the film. ‘Don’t destroy the interest your friends might take in this film. Don’t tell them what you...

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At Tate Modern: Gabriel Orozco

T.J. Clark, 17 February 2011

I can’t for the life of me remember why I was so bad-tempered the first time I saw a show of Gabriel Orozco years ago in New York. Orozco’s mid-career retrospective at Tate Modern...

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Bourgeois Reveries: Farmer Eliot

Julian Bell, 3 February 2011

‘In T.S. Eliot we find the poet as farmer’: now that truly is revisionist. If the pin-striped modernist with the ‘features of clerical cut’ ever put his hand to a...

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Camille Pissarro, the great Impressionist painter, spent a year in England escaping from the Franco-Prussian War. His eldest son, Lucien, spent more than half his life here. Lucien was the...

Read more about At the Ashmolean: Lucien and Camille Pissarro

Diary: At Potemkin Productions

Peter Pomerantsev, 3 February 2011

In 2006 I was invited to take part in one of the great adventures of modern broadcasting – conquering the booming Russian television market. The company I was hired by, Potemkin...

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Short Cuts: The End of Kodachrome

Julian Stallabrass, 3 February 2011

The longest-lived of camera films has just ended its 75-year history. The only laboratory that still processed Kodachrome, the first commercially available colour slide film, stopped doing so at...

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At the Movies: ‘True Grit’

Michael Wood, 3 February 2011

‘Pastoral scene of the gallant South’, Billie Holiday sang, evoking a landscape of lynched bodies. This was the ‘strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees’. Certainly a...

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At Dulwich Picture Gallery: Norman Rockwell

Peter Campbell, 20 January 2011

If you grew up in the 1940s and 1950s anywhere in the English-speaking world where American magazines were more likely to be found than European ones, places where the culture was popular not...

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At Victoria Miro: Francesca Woodman

Brian Dillon, 20 January 2011

In 1972, at the age of 13, Francesca Woodman photographed herself sitting on the end of a sofa at her home in Boulder, Colorado. The room looks like a studio; Woodman’s parents were...

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In one of the diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks Putin and Medvedev are compared to Batman and Robin. It’s a useful analogy: isn’t Julian Assange, WikiLeaks’s organiser, a...

Read more about Good Manners in the Age of WikiLeaks: Gentlemen of the Left

In his lifetime his reputation was high, but Sir Thomas Lawrence was scarcely buried – with great pomp in the crypt of St Paul’s – before the feeling spread that his work had...

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Diary: Life with WikiLeaks

Glen Newey, 6 January 2011

Freedom, in the words of the old Irish nationalist song, comes from God’s right hand. As with the gift of divine grace, it puts its recipients on the spot. Are we in a fit state to receive...

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The employees gather outside the shop in the morning, waiting for the boss to arrive and let them in, and already a curious sort of time travel begins, memories of what will be this film’s...

Read more about At the Movies: ‘The Shop around the Corner’