Art
-
-
British buyer sought for 17th-century work Garden of Eden With the Fall of Man, judged to be of outstanding aesthetic importance
-
Former distillery to become city’s newest and largest gallery of contemporary art
-
-
We’re at America’s biggest art fair, where artists, architects, collectors and celebrities hit Miami Beach to buy cutting-edge work by day – and go to parties by night
-
Phillip King’s sculptures from the 1960s helped to define a new era in British art. As he turns 80, and ahead of a Tate retrospective of his work,, he talks to Nicholas Wroe
-
The subversive south London collective staged parties, launched an online channel, and now makes subversive and often participatory art works for the digital generation
-
-
From Bruegel to Botticelli, Laura Cumming chooses her favourite depictions of the Christmas story
-
Neon artist Chris Bracey started out making signage for Soho strip joints and went on to work on films like Blade Runner and Batman
-
What happened last week? What did Tuesday look like, did you spot a UFO or two, and who’s that surprise visitor?
-
Amid the ‘crapstraction’ of Miami Beach, the British conceptual artist says he plans to go gently into that good night – ie, ‘Be really fucking hot for a really long time’
-
-
Jonathan Jones on art Mr Turner’s record year should blaze a trail for British painting’s other greats
The avalanche of interest in JMW Turner is welcome – but he was not the only artist to give colour to the 18th and 19th centuries. Let’s give some others a chance -
LA is the ideal location for a Pierre Huyghe retrospective – the artist’s baffling and borderless installations fit right in with the city’s chaotic character
-
The Spanish architects, who specialise in semi-submerged builds in harmony with their natural surroundings, promise an ‘experimental’ pavilion that will ‘embrace the garden’
-
-
Rome, From Mount Aventine was one of the last great works in private hands and remains in exceptional condition
-
Megumi Igarashi ‘planned to build boat based on her genitals using 3D printer’ having been arrested and released in July on similar grounds
-
Exhibition opening at the Ashmolean features more than 90 works, tracing Blake’s life from apprentice to master
-
-
Stuart Heritage: Microsoft Office’s brutal closing of the legendary image library signals the end of a glorious era of clumsily resized birthday cakes and disembodied bridges
-
Jeremy Deller on watching Benny Hill with Andy Warhol and why there’s more to William Morris than floral wallpaper
-
This award-winning work attempted to convey the experience of the internet through performance art
-
A total lack of integrity distinguishes Hambling’s latest collection of daft daubs
-
-
-
Following previous designs by Vivienne Westwood and Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin is the latest prominent British figure to use the music award as canvas
-
A new exhibition in Rome charts the enduring artistic life of Iran over the turbulence of its past fifty years.
-
Exhibition showcases figurative painter’s first archive paintings alongside an exploration into the natural world – and several new studies of his own head
-
-
A 54-minute Marxist meditation has just won Duncan Campbell the Turner prize. The artist tells Charlotte Higgins about the dialectics of Christmas stockings, his Das Kapital reading group with Michael Clark – and picking a fight with the British Museum
-
Works by Van Gogh and Constable among treasure trove of paintings, books and sculptures accepted by government in lieu of tax
-
Exhibition of famously glamorous film star shows Hepburn from first appearances at Ciro’s nightclub, which is now part of gallery
-
We’d like to find out what life is like in rural China. Share your photos, videos and experiences via GuardianWitness
-
-
New York artist Ryan McNamara reckons he’s found a way – and it’s the headline event at next week’s art fair, Art Basel Miami
-
China’s president Xi Jinping wants artists to move to villages. But some are well ahead of him, writes Oliver Wainwright
-
Lindy West: The actor’s history of bizarre behaviour doesn’t mean we should take his allegations less seriously. That would be as bad as dismissing them because he is a man
-
Queensland artist survived prisoner of war camp, near drowning and arrest to become one of Australian art’s most influential figures, writes Fiona Gruber
-
Chairman Phillip Keir is hopeful Belgiorno-Nettis family will return as major donors to 20th Biennale after breaking ties with Transfield Services, which operates facilities on Nauru and Manus Island
-
When Molly was diagnosed with clinical depression, she put pen to paper and discovered an unexpected therapy and community
Notebook These are tough times for the Turner Prize, but hardly the apocalypse