I never got an explanation why they decided to do this project but it is a delight.
What the end of the world looks like
For those world leaders, and their followers, who talk casually of nuclear war, here’s a reminder of what will happen. Read more:
Behind the mask
James Ensor, a mass of contradictions, painter of the grotesque, painter of roses. What was he really like. It was fascinating to find out on a journey through his homeland of Flanders. Be intrigued; read more:https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/the-ego-has-landed/
Smile please...
The Estorick Gallery in North London always comes up with intriguing, one-off shows. This about Riccardo Strizzi, photographer to the Italian stars of post-war Italy is no exception.
Talented crackpots, libertines and hardworking gadabouts
When a photograph isn't....
Photo London had the usual array of flash and trash - and remarkable talent. Many continuing to redefine what photograph actual is - as this selection of Turkish image-makers illustrates.
Sniper Fries and a Task Force Hot Dog anyone?
What a clever, understated way to expose the arms trade.
Read more:
Cherchez les femmes
Bit of a mish mash at Margate Contemporary. Poor signage, tricky catalogue. Why make life so difficult? Still, there were some highlights
Read more:
The Merz ‘alien’
The art of self determination
One of the shows of the year (any year). How the new nations used art to express their identity after World War One
When winning is losing
Exhibition at the Army Museum in Paris gets us in the mood for the agony and ecstasy of the Olympic Games which the city is staging this year.
Victory parade under the Arc de Triumph at end of World War One
In full flow
An insight into a brief, charming interlude in the lives of Van Gogh, Seurat, Signac and co.
Read more: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/in-full-flow-by-the-river/
The strange, ordinary world of Lisetta Carmi
I come across the most eccentric, most brilliant people in the art world. Here’s another. What could be more remarkable than saying you would have wanted to be taken to a concentration camp to learn how better to help others?
Fake views
Brilliant small show at the Courtauld (that brilliant small gallery) about the arts and craftiness of the fakes and forgers over the centuries.
The big ice is sick
Dramatic images expose the perils and privations facing the people of the Arctic region as global warming takes a grip.
Pure Sadism finding an image to go with this!
When the fighting has moved on...
There are many brave, inventive, photographers of war. But few capture the pathos, the suffering and the quiet dignity of the victims as well as Ivor Prickett.
Read more: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/no-home-from-war-images-of-conflict-survival-and-loss/
Two above: Syrian refugees.
Below the grieving woman in Mosul
One for the Home Secretary
This exhibition at the Fitzwilliam, Cambridge, was not at all what I expected.
Less is more
I first came across the Italian artist Giorgio Morandi in a gallery on an island near Stockholm, artfully called the Artepeligo. He was teamed with actual potteries by Edmund de Waal and the result was quietly breathtaking. Here he is by himself.
The violence behind the quiet
I meet many impressive people in the world of arts but Anne de Henning is right up there for sheer bravado - not to mention talent. Read all about her: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/the-woman-who-shot-war/
Lost and found in Lithuania
I had never been to Lithuania and knew little about its art scene. It ranges from the ethereal to the decidedly gritty via the bold and radical Henrikas Natalevičius, MK Čiurlionis, Dorothy Bohm, Rimaldas Vikšraitis. And much, much more.
Read:
https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/revealing-the-lost-art-of-lithuania/