Diary: Aboriginal Voices

Rosemary Hill, 14 December 2023

The defeat of The Voice leaves Aboriginal culture stuck in the same queasy relationship to the white nation and its essentially European notion of history that it has been in since the early 20th century,...

Read more about Diary: Aboriginal Voices

One​ of the abiding mysteries in presenting music from the past is what the singers sounded like. There is no evidence for it, apart from written descriptions, all of which fall far short of telling...

Read more about Hickup over the Littany: What did it sound like?

Monet was always more than just an eye. He was a painter of heart and brain, feeling and memory. Late in life, when working on his Water Lilies, he told his friend Gustave Geffroy: ‘They’re beyond...

Read more about Painting is terribly difficult: Myths about Monet

Go for it, losers: Werner Herzog’s Visions

David Trotter, 30 November 2023

Documentary has customarily been regarded as a genre duty-bound to deal in facts. But the only duty Herzog has ever felt as a filmmaker is, as he puts it, to ‘follow a grand vision’.

Read more about Go for it, losers: Werner Herzog’s Visions

At the National Gallery: On Frans Hals

Julian Bell, 30 November 2023

So often Hals’s portrait subjects seem all too up for this charade, insufferably brash and loud. But it’s like any party: individuals are various, you hunt for those you get on with.

Read more about At the National Gallery: On Frans Hals

It’s too late in the day, and too late in the genre, for a gangster movie to be anything other than ironic in relation to morality. But then Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon is not only a gangster...

Read more about At the Movies: ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’

Neither modern nor ‘postmodern’ quite describes Madelon Vriesendorp’s odd, outlier objects. No manifesto here, they quietly do their own thing, and are all the better for that. 

Read more about At Cosmic House: On Madelon Vriesendorp

Among the Rouge-Pots: ‘Yellow Book’ Lives

Freya Johnston, 16 November 2023

At a time when there was no female equivalent of the gentleman’s club, the Yellow Book offered a congenial literary space in which men and women could joke, flirt and briefly imagine themselves free...

Read more about Among the Rouge-Pots: ‘Yellow Book’ Lives

Nearly eighty years after she first starred in a film, Taylor is famous for two things: her intense screen beauty and her many marriages (eight of them, two to Richard Burton). But at least as central...

Read more about I thought you were incredible: Elizabeth Taylor’s Magic

At the Whitechapel: On Nicole Eisenman

John-Paul Stonard, 2 November 2023

Eisenman produces weird imagery with technical expertise, but she doesn’t trade in the off-kilter strangeness, say, of Neo Rauch, and steers clear of Surrealism or the more extreme apocalyptic atmospherics...

Read more about At the Whitechapel: On Nicole Eisenman

Can’t you take a joke?

Jonathan Coe, 2 November 2023

On a personal level, the kinds of thing we laugh at reveal the truth about us as individuals. On a national level, the kinds of thing we laugh at reveal the truth about us as a country. This seems to apply...

Read more about Can’t you take a joke?

It’s​ tempting to think of Past Lives, Celine Song’s haunting (and haunted) first film, as a work in search of a story. In the end, though, it’s exactly the reverse. The story...

Read more about At the Movies: Celine Song’s ‘Past Lives’

Martinique in Burbank: Bogart and Bacall

David Thomson, 19 October 2023

Lauren Bacall was young, but she looked and sounded ancient in her wisdom – and she seemed to be teaching Humphrey Bogart how to relax. They fell in love, which was surely real, but it was the show business...

Read more about Martinique in Burbank: Bogart and Bacall

At the Met: On Cecily Brown

Eleanor Nairne, 19 October 2023

It’s not hard to praise Brown’s ‘bravura brushwork’ and to point out the art-historical precedents and motifs. What’s more difficult is to define her work’s relation to our own carnality, to...

Read more about At the Met: On Cecily Brown

Questions about the kinds of word that were and were not suitable for inclusion were a perennial source of conflict between James Murray and the volunteers who had professional status in a particular field....

Read more about Rare, Obsolete, New, Peculiar: Dictionary People

At the Munch Museum: On Alice Neel

Emily LaBarge, 5 October 2023

Despite the evidence of what the world ‘has done’ to Neel’s sitters, her portraits are never mawkish. She kept something back: wasn’t it more fun, she said, to play hide and seek with her thoughts,...

Read more about At the Munch Museum: On Alice Neel

Short Cuts: Naomi Klein

Jenny Turner, 5 October 2023

‘Going online to try to find some simulation of the friendships and communities I missed,’ Klein found instead ‘The Confusion: a torrent of people discussing me and what I’d said and what I’d...

Read more about Short Cuts: Naomi Klein

Antiquities remain, with the possible exception of wildlife, the only illicit commodity that transnational criminal gangs can trade on the open market. You can’t buy or sell people, drugs or weapons...

Read more about The Ostrich Defence: Trafficking Antiquities