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Anish Kapoor: Splashing Bloody Wombs And One Penis – Jude Cowan Montague

Anish Kapoor: Splashing Bloody Wombs And One Penis – Jude Cowan Montague

by News Desk | May 25, 2019 | Reviews

I can’t see an Anish Kapoor exhibition at the moment. I can’t talk about Anish Kapoor at the moment. Not without the first thing on my mind being that infamous black paint copyright purchase. It paints him as a devil, Mammon. A capitalist artist. A rich...
Leonardo Da Vinci A Man Of Seductive Charm – Edward Lucie-Smith

Leonardo Da Vinci A Man Of Seductive Charm – Edward Lucie-Smith

by News Desk | May 25, 2019 | Reviews

This will be a great year of Leonardo celebrations because 2019 marks five centuries since the great artist died and Leonardo is now one of the great monuments of Western culture. Various countries are squabbling over who can do his memory the most honour. The chief...
Artificial Intelligence More Than Human – Barbican – Edward Lucie-Smith

Artificial Intelligence More Than Human – Barbican – Edward Lucie-Smith

by News Desk | May 20, 2019 | Reviews

Right now, the Curve Gallery at the Barbican has a big show entitled More Than Human that seems exceptionally relevant, not so much to what is happening in the visual arts right now, as to what seems likely to happen. Its theme is AI (artificial intelligence). By...
Piero Manzoni The grid And Everyday Materials – Ilka Scobie

Piero Manzoni The grid And Everyday Materials – Ilka Scobie

by News Desk | May 18, 2019 | Reviews

Self-taught artist and avant-garde predecessor to the Arte Povera movement, Piero Manzoni was born to an aristocratic family in Soncino, Italy in 1933. His singular non-conformist creativity blossomed during Italy’s post-war boom years of consumerism and communism....
Cathy Wilkes: Resurrecting The Forgotten British Pavilion Venice Biennale – Sue Hubbard

Cathy Wilkes: Resurrecting The Forgotten British Pavilion Venice Biennale – Sue Hubbard

by News Desk | May 14, 2019 | Reviews

May you live in interesting times is the overarching theme of this year’s Biennale. Dystopia and dissonance are everywhere played out in the themes of climate change and post-human CGI that take us to some dark places. This 2019 Biennale could well be the last when...
Whatever Happened To Anthony Caro? – Three Reviews – Edward Lucie-Smith

Whatever Happened To Anthony Caro? – Three Reviews – Edward Lucie-Smith

by News Desk | May 14, 2019 | Reviews

Whatever happened to Anthony Caro? In Jonathan Jones’ new book about the history of British art from Hogarth to Banksy, Caro gets about half a page. It describes how his abstract sculptures climbed down off the pedestals that three-dimensional works had previously...
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