Your weekly art world low-down: news, ideas and things to see The inner life of India, Warhol’s America and the Munch bunch – the week in art | Art and design | The Guardian
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| | | The inner life of India, Warhol’s America and the Munch bunch – the week in art | | Edvard Munch’s weird and creepy portraits, Arpita Singh’s first major UK exhibition and a sea view from East Anglia – all in your weekly dispatch | | | Detail from The Tamarind Tree, 2022, by Arpita Singh. Photograph: Courtesy of Vadehra Family Collection. © Arpita Singh | | | | Exhibition of the week Arpita Singh: Remembering First major UK exhibition for this veteran Indian painter of modern life. • Serpentine North, London, from 20 March until 27 July Also showing Edvard Munch Portraits This great painter of inward states turns his eye on external appearances in a survey of his portraits. • National Portrait Gallery, London until 15 June Andy Warhol: Portrait of America The excellent Artist Rooms collection offers up its holdings of the Popfather. • MK Gallery, Milton Keynes from 15 March until 29 June Towering Dreams Romantic visions and follies in architectural drawings from Sir John Soane’s Museum. • Compton Verney, Warwickshire from 15 March until 31 August A World of Water How the sea – especially East Anglia’s “local” North Sea – has been depicted in art from the 1600s to now. • Sainsbury Centre, UEA, Norwich from 15 March until 3 August Image of the week | | | | Map/Quilt, 1999 by Ficre Ghebreyesus. Photograph: © The Estate of Ficre Ghebreyesus. Courtesy Galerie Lelong & Co and Modern Art | | Having fled war in Eritrea at 16 Ficre Ghebreyesus, who died in 2012, said painting gave him back his life. His vertiginous paintings celebrate family, the diaspora and his own turbulent story and his first European solo exhibition charts this remarkable journey. Read the full story What we learned Ceramicist Carol McNicoll, who gave everyday objects a surreal twist, died aged 81 Fifty years in 14th-century Siena in Italy may not sound electrifying, but it is The Pompidou Centre in Paris is beginning work on a €262m refit Sylvie Fleury gives Matisse’s drawings and cutouts a modern punk twist Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan are demystifying ‘the idea of art as an individual pursuit’ Painter Celia Paul says the YBA era was a party ‘I was definitely excluded from’ William S Burroughs regretted shooting his wife but still made art with guns Masterpiece of the week Salisbury Cathedral and Leadenhall from the River Avon by John Constable, 1820 | | | | | | The place is placid, the brushwork stormy. This is an oil sketch, painted on the spot, in the open air, more than 50 years before the launch of impressionism. French artists and art lovers were in fact among the first to see Constable’s originality. Modest and conservative in his life and views, this painter from Suffolk simply put his canvas in front of nature and painted what he saw – but in doing so daubed his feelings. He was staying in Salisbury in 1820 as a guest of the bishop. In his eyes the peaceful cathedral environs become charged with energy and passion. Every puff of grey cloud and each dappled tree seems wrenched from the palette of his heart. It may seem gentle but this is a masterpiece of the Romantic age, poetically connecting the outward mystery of nature and time (symbolised by the centuries-old spire) with the inward state of the artist. • 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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