Your weekly art world low-down: news, ideas and things to see Warhol on Beuys, Pauline Boty’s swinging 60s and jugs in abundance – the week in art | Art and design | The Guardian
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| Warhol on Beuys, Pauline Boty’s swinging 60s and jugs in abundance – the week in art | | Warhol captures his friend with icy darkness, Bruce McLean chooses pottery over provocation and a contemporary gem on the north Wales coast – all in your weekly dispatch | | | Andy Warhol: Joseph Beuys, 1980-1983. Photograph: © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Schellmann Art / DACS, London, 2023. | | | | Exhibition of the week Andy Warhol: The Joseph Beuys Portraits Haunting images by the great American artist of his German peer. With typical icy darkness, Warhol sees fragility and fear in Beuys. • Thaddaeus Ropac Gallery, London, 14 December to 9 February Also showing Pauline Boty: A Portrait Pop art with a difference as Boty sees the swinging 60s from a female perspective. • Gazelli Art House, London, until 24 February Christine Ay Tjoe – Lesser Numerator Swirling abstract paintings that explore the artist’s inner truth. • White Cube Mason’s Yard, London, until 13 January Bruce McLean: Sculptures of Jugs and Paintings of Sculptures of Jugs One-time provocative performance and conceptual artist McLean shows his latest sculptures and paintings. • Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London, until 22 December Taloi Havini One of the artists in this year’s Artes Mundi shows at this lively contemporary space in north Wales’s most elegant seaside resort. • Oriel Mostyn, Llandudno, until 24 February Image of the week | | | | ‘Almost psychedelic blues, reds and golds’ … The Pistoia Trinity altarpiece, c 1455-60, showing in Pesellino: A Renaissance Master Revealed at the National Gallery. Photograph: Guy Bell/Shutterstock | | | A lost star of the Florentine Renaissance shines again at the Pesellino show at the National Gallery, displaying works that only fill a single room. The Florentine artist was a master of light, colour and the miraculous everyday life in the walled city. Catch it until 10 March 2024. Read the full review here. What we learned ‘A frenzy of judgement’: artist Candice Breitz on her German show being pulled over Gaza Sunshine returns to St Petersburg: Claudine Doury’s best photograph Turner prize winner Jesse Darling: ‘I’ve been a dancer, a decorator and a circus clown’ Jesse Darling wins the 2023 Turner Prize Hockney in Hawaii: museum curates artist’s largest print exhibition to date From a 100-mile city to a desert ski resort: why is Saudi Arabia spending billions on architectural ‘gigaprojects’? ‘Every time I visit this sculpture park, there is something beautiful to capture’: Jennifer Cheung’s best phone picture Parts of Anselm Kiefer sculpture stolen from French warehouse Nixon, Monroe and cheeky male buttocks: the soul-affirming photography of Elliott Erwitt Masterpiece of the week Seated Man, Woman with Jar and Boy by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, c 1740-6 | | | | | | Within the perfumed colours and breezy decorative lightness of this painting, a totally unexpected rawness hits you. The man sitting in the foreground in an elaborate antiquated costume may simply look like a quirky invention, but the woman he’s looking up at and the boy behind her have a strong, vivid reality like people seen in the street. The rococo art style of the early 18th century is full of moments like this when an apparent fantasy world becomes contemporary. Tiepolo was one of the greatest European artists of the rococo and in demand far beyond his native Venice. He painted this for a Venetian palace, and the light and space of the lagoon city seem to be in it. Art often makes weighty claims it fails to justify but here Tiepolo, in his levity, creates a moving image of the mystery of life. • National Gallery Don’t forget To follow us on X (Twitter): @GdnArtandDesign. 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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