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Chief curator Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro attempts to shake up the biennial model
A show that reveals Pop not just as an art of happy, shiny surfaces, but as a form of rebellion, too
The artist’s documents of gay life in Bogotá balance beauty and ugliness, politics and lyricism
Could this marathon cycle of 50 creative projects in 50 weeks prove as prophetic as its predecessor?
A venerable picture-framing business is curating contemporary art in a purpose-built space
David Moore’s restaurant business survived a catastrophic fire
A charismatic show devoted to the early years of British pop art
‘Gallery owners began to appreciate the benefits of hanging artworks in restaurants’
In this National Gallery show, pieces by the politicised provocateur resonate with London’s current art frenzy
After years of debt and drastic cuts, London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts is fighting back with a mix of the crowd-pleasing and the cerebral
A return visit to some of the city’s restaurants and bars banishes some bad New Year memories
Haunch of Venison launches a special show on British postwar painting, ‘the most underexplored terrain of our national art’
A new show explores the often surprising dialogue among Britain’s most celebrated postwar artists – and what it reveals about their work
Tate Modern’s retrospective of Gerhard Richter demonstrates his unrivalled influence as a painter
Richard Hamilton, who first gave a name to most important art movement of the postwar era, dies aged 89
A playful yet powerful series of collages includes some 100 works
The British artist has created a compelling new version of the beleaguered genre of history painting, as his 'protest pictures' show
International Edition