José da Silva
José da Silva is the Exhibitions Editor of The Art Newspaper
Five must-see shows at Condo 2017 in London
UK capital plays host to 36 international galleries in the second edition of this antidote to the uniformity and expense of art fairs
Giant Portuguese cock takes flight for Beijing and Shanghai
Ten-metre-high illuminated sculpture was originally created for Rio de Janeiro
Three to see: London
From the feminist avant-garde works collected by an Austrian electrical company to the Aussie Impressionists inspired by Monet<br> <br>
Gabi Ngcobo appointed curator of the Berlin Biennale
South African curator will lead the tenth edition of the experimental German event
Turner Prize nominee Helen Marten wins inaugural £30,000 Hepworth Prize for Sculpture
Young artist beats off competition for the UK award from veterans Phyllida Barlow and David Medalla but pledges to share prize
Three to see: Vienna
See Francis Alÿs’s dreamy paintings and Dürer’s apocalyptic nightmare during Vienna Art Week<br>
Norwegian minister steps in after Bjarne Melgaard's works detained by customs as 'not art'
Artist and his gallery were facing a huge VAT bill to release 16 paintings
Three to see: London
From a rare UK visit by Flaming June to the muted horrors of Paul Nash’s war paintings
Step inside Gaudí’s first major creation
A home the Spanish architect built for a Barcelona stockbroker is to be restored—with input from the first tenants’ descendants
Three to see: London
From William Kentridge’s cacophonous contraptions to a 3-million-year-old readymade at the British Museum <br> <br>
Three to see: London
William Eggleston's sumptuous portraits, two million pennies at the Turner Prize and the source of art revealed in south London<br>
Foam machines, scented curtains and cherry pips feature in first Hepworth Prize for Sculpture show
Four artists have been shortlisted for new £30,000 award, from Turner-Prize-nominated Helen Marten to veteran Filipino sculptor David Medalla
Three to see: London
From Chaimowicz’s dark disco delights to the long shadow of influence cast by Caravaggio <br>
Marc Camille Chaimowicz: Discoballs and déjà vu
Serpentine Gallery surveys full breadth of artist’s work in a great London show
Interview: Yuri Pattison has his eye on you
The winner of this year’s Frieze Artist Award taps into mass data surveillance by filming and recording visitors to the fair
Workin’ nine to five, what a way to make a living
Several stands at Frieze London deal with toil, labour and employment in very different ways
Former MoMA curator leads new riverside art, architecture and technology museum in Lisbon
Museu de Arte, Arquitetura e Tecnologia opens with a major installation by French artist Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
Three to see: London
From the strange set-pieces of Bedwyr Williams to a festival of the city’s emerging art scene, via luxurious Medieval needlework<br> <br>
Three to see: London
Gawp and howl at Wifredo Lam’s Vodou inspired-works before being sectioned at the Wellcome Collection’s Bedlam show <br>
Three to see: beyond London
Do time in Oscar Wilde’s Reading jail, self-reflect with Maria Lassnig in Liverpool before seeing the light in Cambridge with illuminated manuscripts <br> <br>
Artangel’s latest commission by Vietnamese artist Dinh Q. Lê shows the backbreaking harvest of bird shit
The multi-screen installation is on display at a former Eclectic Theatre in London’s Peckham
Three to see: London
Channel spirits at the Courtauld Gallery and find “found” objects at the Foundling Museum <br>
Three to see: London
Travel to sunny Sicily at the British Museum before taking a dip in Battersea Park<br> <br>
Three to see: London
Scandinavian salivation at the Barbican, California dreaming in Whitechapel and textile titillation at Camden Arts Centre <br> <br>
Three to see: London
From Georgia O’Keeffe’s great blooming flowers and Walter Sickert’s snaps to 50 metres of latex in Westminster <br>
Three to see: London
From dour Dostoevsky to sunny South Americans, what to see this weekend in the capital
She’s got the look: where to find self-portraits, a jeune fille, muses and an unmerry widow at Art Basel
Beyeler gets the balance right
Alexander Calder’s grandson picks his favourite works in the artist’s joint show with Fischli/Weiss