Art Weekly

Prince's purple, black consciousness and Pink Floyd – the week in art

The Pantone Color Institute’s Love Symbol #2, African American art at the Tate, plus Turkish tulips, a medieval master and more – all in your weekly dispatch

Tulips (after Mapplethorpe) by Michael Craig-Martin
Tulips (after Mapplethorpe) by Michael Craig-Martin is in Gavin Turk’s Turkish Tulips exhibition at Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle. Photograph: Michael Craig-Martin

Exhibition of the week

Turkish Tulips
Mat Collishaw, Cornelia Parker, Damien Hirst and Peter Blake are among the artists delighting in the botany and art history of the tulip in this exhibition curated by the eponymous Gavin Turk.
Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham, until 5 November.

Also this week

Soul of a Nation
Don’t miss this powerful and pertinent survey of how black consciousness transformed American art.
Tate Modern, London, until 22 October.

Raqib Shaw
Echoes of Richard Dadd and the pre-Raphaelites glitter in Shaw’s opulent and fantastical paintings.
The Whitworth, Manchester, until 19 November.

Giovanni da Rimini
An encounter with a little known master of medieval Italian art from the age of Dante.
National Gallery, London, until 8 October.

Pink Floyd
Few rock bands invested so much in visual effects as the Floyd, from psychedelic light shows to Gerald Scarfe’s work on The Wall, so this is almost like a proper art exhibition.
•V&A, London, until 1 October.

Masterpiece of the week

Still Life with Tulips, Chrysanthemums, Narcissi, Roses, Irises and other Flowers in a Glass Vase (1608-10) by Jan Brueghel the Elder

Jan Brueghel the Elder, Still Life with Tulips, Chrysanthemums, Narcissi, Roses, Irises and other Flowers in a Glass Vase, 1608-10

This floral still life revels in the sheer abundance of nature, getting in as many intense colours and shapes as possible. Brueghel’s father, Pieter, was a brilliant painter of the social world whose epic social scenes such as The Tower of Babel and The Peasant Wedding compare with Shakespeare’s plays as human dramas. Jan opted for a quieter artistic life and his paintings of flowers were coveted and imitated throughout Europe. He was friends with Pieter Paul Rubens who portrayed him and his family in what can be seen as the first great artistic image of bourgeois domesticity. This painting is a hymn not just to nature but the civilised enjoyment of it.
National Gallery, London

Image of the week

Love Symbol #2, by Pantone Color Institute

Pantone Color Institute’s new shade of purple, Love Symbol #2

Pantone has announced a new shade of purple named in honour of the late musician Prince, who died last year. The singer became associated with the colour after his global hit album and associated movie, Purple Rain. A 30th-anniversary edition of the album has just been released.

What we learned this week

RB Kitaj could take posthumous revenge on “no-talent” critics in a memoir to be published next month

even as critics make a return to national TV

The Beazley design awards celebrate hats, flags and typefaces

London’s Garden Bridge is dead

JMW Turner’s Twickenham house has been restored

while two London architects are letting the weather into their home

Korea is commemorating wartime “comfort women” with statues on buses

Yeats family treasures will go on display for the first time, ahead of auction

Japan’s first travel guide was created by woodblock artists

In Ward Roberts’ photo series Flotsam, sunbathers are marooned on New York’s Far Rockaway beach

Neon is back in vogue

Small worlds are made in a London workshop

Tate Modern is to host a ceramics factory

Sweden’s Fotografiska gallery is to open a London outpost

Making Faces shows how art helped brain injury survivors

Lee Ji-hee makes beautiful antique cameras out of paper

Nick Hannes shows how Dubai’s rich set live

The British Museum is marking a centenary of revolution with a show of communist currencies

Get involved

Book now for two forthcoming Guardian masterclass events. On Saturday 26 August, join Jonathan Jones for a morning tour of the Wallace Collection, London, on which he will talk about how to interpret some of his favourite works of art, and point out some of the secrets of their creation. And on 24 September, art scholar Edgar Tijhuis will lead a full-day course on How to write about art and make money from it at Kings Place, London. Book now to secure your place.

Our A-Z of Art series continues – share your art with the theme V for value.

And check out the entries we selected for the theme U for underwater.

Don’t forget

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