View in browserJasper Johns' hot wax, Big Tom's geometry, and the strangest surrealist ever – the week in art | Art and design | The Guardian
| Jasper Johns' hot wax, Big Tom's geometry, and the strangest surrealist ever – the week in art | The great America unfurls his flags, targets, maps and beer cans, an old master called Big Tom reveals some weird geometry, and the Turner prize hits Hull – all in your weekly dispatch | | Serious irony … Flag, 1958, by Jasper Johns. Photograph: Jamie Stukenberg © The Wildenstein Plattner Institute/Jasper Johns /VAGA, New York/DACS, London | Jonathan Jones | Exhibition of the week Jasper Johns The intellect and emotion of the objects and paintings, prints and assemblages of this exquisite artist put him at the centre of the art of our time. Flags, targets, maps and beer cans – Johns has done them all with unequalled wit. He managed to invent pop art, conceptual art and minimalism all in one go when he started to make an American flag out of waxy paint layered over newspaper collage in 1954 and has been meditating with the same serious irony about objects and their meanings ever since. • Royal Academy, London, from 23 September to 10 December. Also this week Turner prize 2017 May it be forever young – but not ageist any more, with Lubaina Himid and Hurvin Anderson both riding roughshod over the “under 50” rule in a shortlist that also includes Andrea Büttner and Rosalind Nashashibi. • Ferens Art Gallery, Hull, from 26 September to 7 January. Marcel Broodthaers This great Belgian visionary began as a surrealist and became the wittiest and strangest pioneer of conceptual art. • Hauser & Wirth, London, from 27 September to 18 November. Jesse Wine and Haffendi Anuar London’s latest venue for public art is Battersea power station. Will the first sculptures in a new series called Powerhouse Commissions outdo Pink Floyd’s flying pigs in exploiting this iconic setting? • Battersea power station, London, from 26 September. Daniel Buren The veteran French conceptual artist reveals his latest works, in which brightly coloured geometric shapes are repeated and reflected in big mirrored surfaces. • Lisson Gallery, London, from 22 September to 11 November. Masterpiece of the week The Virgin and Child (1426) by Masaccio | | The short-lived early-Renaissance genius Masaccio – known to posterity only by his nickname, which roughly means “Big Tom” – was in his late 20s when he died in around 1428 or 29. Yet he had already taken European painting into its future by showing how the perspective method could create deep illusions of space on a flat surface. His frescoes in Santa Maria Novella and the Brancacci Chapel in Florence are his masterpieces, but this rare surviving panel painting by him preserves the severe grace of his style. The Virgin’s throne is a powerful example of how he makes the world look more real in painting than it ever had before. Yet this is no mere technical experiment. Masaccio is an artist of profound religious feeling. • National Gallery, London Images of week | | Photograph: Jack Taylor/Getty Images Photograph: Jack Taylor/Getty Images | Two new Banksy artworks appeared at the Barbican, London, inspired by the centre’s Jean-Michel Basquiat exhibition. The murals were confirmed as genuine on the artist’s verified Instagram account, where he said: “Major new Basquiat show opens at the Barbican – a place that is normally very keen to clean any graffiti from its walls.” The first image, which is possibly mocking the exhibition, as Basquiat was originally a graffiti artist, is of a ferris wheel with people queueing up at a ticket booth. The second post is captioned: “Portrait of Basquiat being welcomed by the Metropolitan police – an (unofficial) collaboration with the new Basquiat show.” In a work clearly inspired by Basquiat’s Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump, Banksy portrays police officers searching and questioning a boy figure as a dog looks on. | | Photograph: Rune Hellestad/Corbis/Getty Images Photograph: Rune Hellestad/Corbis/Getty Images | What we learned this week Gillian Wearing unveiled her statue of suffragist Millicent Fawcett for London’s Parliament Square … while Frieze will show feminist art previously shunned as too explicit Ai Weiwei has made a documentary to highlight the suffering of refugees Newcastle’s art champion Locus+ is fighting for its existence Berlin opened a museum of graffiti The National Museum of Australia is triumphantly exploring Indigenous songlines British responses to arte povera have been a poor show New York commuters are heading to work in India Rachel Whiteread’s inside-out view of the world is spellbinding Fashion designer Holly Fulton’s house is a work of art A hoard of 30s cinema posters made a splash at auction German kids love gumballs Maccabees pop star Orlando Weeks has turned illustrator Wallace Sewell are making London travel more colourful Cape Town’s Mocaa is open … and blockbuster art shows are breaking out all over Europe The National Portrait Gallery will step off the wall with Michael Jackson The Tate Modern is set to host its first ever solo Picasso exhibition Get involved Our A-Z of Art series continues – share your art with the theme W for women.
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