|
|
| | Alexander Rodchenko transformed photography by his obsession with strange angles. As a new exhibition opens at the Hayward, Benjamin Secher looks at his brief but turbulent career. He draws them in gunpowder, blood and even mango chutney - pioneering American pop artist Ed Ruscha tells Alastair Sooke why it's words as objects that inspire him. |
|
|
THE ART WORLD Click here for our pick of the week art slideshow. Buying? Selling? Just looking? The pieces moving and for how much. Colin Gleadell rounds up the latest developments in the art market.
|
MORE VISUAL ARTS... The works in a Hayward show about the nature of humour range from unfunny to offensive. This could be one of the year's worst, says Richard Dorment. | | Peter Doig applies paint to the canvas with a strange and beguiling intensity. The creatures that haunted art at the end of the 19th century are the subject of a new exhibition. It's not enough just to take your clothes off - the best life models offer something 'challenging' too. Muņoz is the poet of doubt, the Homer of ambiguity. |
|
|
Around the UK
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You are here: Telegraph > Arts >
Visual Arts