Your weekly art world low-down: news, ideas and things to see A sumptuous rehang, jumbo jellyfish and naive manly paintings – the week in art | Art and design | The Guardian
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| | | A sumptuous rehang, jumbo jellyfish and naive manly paintings – the week in art | | The revamped National Gallery offers a new take on its glorious wonders, a psychoanalytical painter tackles masculinity, and abstract watercolours rise from the deep – all in your weekly dispatch | | | ‘One of the world’s richest and deepest art museums’ … the new hang at the National Gallery. Photograph: The National Gallery, London. | | | | Exhibition of the week The Wonder of Art New ways of seeing European art from Jan van Eyck to Cézanne and Picasso in a sumptuous rehang of one of the world’s richest and deepest art museums. And all for free. Read the five-star review. • National Gallery, London, from 10 May Also showing Chantal Joffe: The Prince Paintings of men and masculinity by this deliberately naive-looking, but in reality psychoanalytical, artist. • Newlyn Art Gallery and the Exchange, Cornwall, from 15 May to 1 November Rene Matić New photographs by one of the nominees for this year’s Turner prize. Read the review. • Arcadia Missa, London, until 3 June Barbara Nicholls Abstract watercolours that look like giant jellyfish risen from the deep. • Patrick Heide Contemporary Art, London, until 21 June Martin Creed Everything Is Going to Be Alright – so Creed keeps telling us in neon, this time on the facade of a new arts centre. • Camden Arts Projects, London, until 29 June Image of the week | | | | Dublin’s bronze statue of the fictional fishmonger Molly Malone. Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images | | After years of supposedly bringing good luck to whoever touched the breasts of Dublin’s Molly Malone statue, they are now off-limits as the city council is notifying would-be gropers to leave her cleavage alone. Read the full story. What we learned Robbie Williams’s art is ‘incredibly bad’ Desmond Morris’s first film was an eye-opening surrealist love romp Artist Huma Bhabha is squaring up to Giacometti with wellies, skulls and teeth Japan’s love hotels are wild A rare LS Lowry painting bought for £10 in 1926 sold for £800,000 An “extreme” mould is threatening some of Denmark’s most important paintings A Berlin art legend has put on a non-stop performance art piece for 25 years Artist Su Yu-Xin makes her paint from pearls, crystals and volcanic dust Masterpiece of the week The Virgin and Child, possibly by Antonello da Messina, c 1460-69 | | | | | | You can see a modern world emerge from the middle ages in this painting. It’s full of ripely gothic religious imagery, including the little angels with their stiff angular wings holding an ostentatiously bejewelled crown over Mary’s head. Yet look at her face. Her features are depicted with stunning precision as she looks down with gentle affection and modest reverence at her holy child. No one could portray a face this accurately before the 15th century, and the skill and technique were first perfected in Flanders by Jan van Eyck. Yet this may not be a northern work at all. It’s tentatively attributed by the National Gallery to Antonello da Messina, one of the first Italian artists to assimilate Van Eyck’s discoveries. It was even said he journeyed from Naples to Bruges, befriended Van Eyck and stole his secrets. That is just a legend. Yet if this is by him, it shows his profound debt to the northern master. • National Gallery, London Sign up to the Art Weekly newsletter If you don’t already receive our regular roundup of art and design news via email, please sign up here. Get in touch If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com | |
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