
Richard Holledge
03 September 2025
The water always wins

A new exhibition charts humanity’s long, losing battle – there’s either too much or too little, and it’s always in the wrong place
Read the full article27 August 2025
The Sámi’s needlework revolutionary

Britta Marakatt-Labba’s embroideries transform the herdspeople’s history into a textile protest poem
Read the full article06 August 2025
Eyes from the shadows of Pinochet’s Chile

When teacher Paz Errázuriz lost her job in Pinochet’s coup, she picked up a camera – and found a new way to resist
Read the full article05 June 2025
Zed Nelson’s unnatural world

The photographer’s images of man’s ongoing mission to tame and commercialise the wild are a spectacle
Read the full article18 May 2025
When paint went mad

Celebrating Roger Fry, the curator whose early exhibitions of post-impressionist art shocked the critics
Read the full article18 April 2025
Max Ernst’s marvellous madness

A new exhibition focuses on the surrealist’s cinematic adventures
Read the full article23 March 2025
The tragedy and triumph of Tirzah Garwood

Widowed, gravely ill and with three children under seven, the artist somehow managed to reinvent her work
Read the full article19 March 2025
The bank that thinks it’s a gallery

Corporate giants buy great art like stocks and shares – and then hide it from the public. But in Italy, things are thankfully a little different…
Read the full article12 February 2025
Rebuilding Palmyra, brick by electronic brick

The ancient city of Palmyra was shattered by Islamic State. Now a Syrian artist is rebuilding it on her computer
Read the full article15 January 2025
Apocalypse right now: visions of destruction and disaster in Northern Italy

A new exhibition recalls the litany of catastrophe that has afflicted the world for centuries
Read the full article26 December 2024
Ukraine’s painful beauty

A Kyiv gallery has defied Russian missile attacks to stage a visceral but tender art competition for artists under 35
Read the full article11 December 2024
Paula Rego’s nursery nightmares

Inspired by Goya, the Portuguese artist’s versions of Humpty Dumpty and Three Blind Mice are very much not for children
Read the full article11 December 2024
Capturing space and time in Kazakhstan

Photographer Andrew McConnell set out to record cosmonauts in Kazakhstan – but found the local people infinitely more fascinating
Read the full article26 November 2024
Antonio Calderara, the changing man

Once a painter of charming small-town scenes, Antonio Calderara radically departed into the abstract. But was this shift as sudden, or surprising, as it seems?
Read the full article25 September 2024
Rediscovering impressionist landscapes

Photographer Christoph Irrgang returns to the sites where masterpieces were painted to see how much they have changed
Read the full article18 September 2024
The gold and silver medallist

The innovative works of Norway’s Anna-Eva Bergman, realised in metal leaf, bear comparison with Rothko and Klimt
Read the full article11 September 2024
Norway’s forgotten genius

The small town of Bodø has achieved recognition as the European Capital of Culture 2024. Now, will it also recognise one of its own?
Read the full article31 July 2024
Living in the shadow of Chernobyl

Pierpaolo Mittica’s photos capture everyday existence in the ‘new Pompeii’ – close to the site of the world’s worst nuclear accident
Read the full article24 July 2024
The ego has landed

The man behind the masks and mysteries – James Ensor, the angry, vindictive, solitary genius of Ostend
Read the full article26 June 2024
Sergio Strizzi: the perfect moment

A new exhibition of the Italian photographer’s work captures the glamour of postwar Italian film
Read the full article19 June 2024
The brightest false dawn

Early Soviet avant-garde art… and how it was crushed
Read the full article13 May 2024
Crescent tense: Photo London is a Turkish delight

Provocative and dramatic work from Turkey is among the highlights of this year’s Photo London
Read the full article17 April 2024
Clinical. Cynical. Homicidal.

Nikita Teryoshin’s chilling photos of ‘The back office of war’
Read the full article03 April 2024
Women in revolt: a shared language of radical abstraction

A new exhibition connects the work of over 50 women from across the world
Read the full article24 January 2024
Dancing at the crossroads: Dublin celebrates art from the ashes of the first world war

A hugely ambitious exhibition at the Irish Museum of Modern Art shows how a burgeoning sense of nationhood gripped many European countries in 1918
Read the full article07 January 2024
When is a victory not a victory?

After the battle comes the reckoning – even for the winners
Read the full article24 December 2023
In full flow by the river

For one brief moment, five very different artists – including Van Gogh and Seurat – sought inspiration on the banks of the Seine
Read the full article02 December 2023
Defiant Kyiv’s art of war

As Russia bombs Ukraine’s cultural sites, the powerful work in the capital’s Biennial is scattered across Europe
Read the full article01 November 2023
Lisetta Carmi, the genius of Genoa

The refugee, who became an acclaimed photographer, had a lifelong fascination with outsiders
Read the full article06 September 2023
Fake views: the art of the counterfeiter

Technology is making forged paintings easier to identify, and giving us a chance to appreciate the art and craft of the counterfeiters
Read the full article16 August 2023
The prince of prints: Albrecht Dürer’s apocalyptic visions

The German artist was an immodest man with little to be modest about
Read the full article02 August 2023
Ragnar Axelsson: Ambassador of a melting world

The Icelandic photographer captures landscapes laid bare by receding ice caps.. and the haunted faces of locals who see their way of life ending
Read the full article