José da Silva

José da Silva is the Exhibitions Editor of The Art Newspaper

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

Beyeler gets the balance right

Alexander Calder’s grandson picks his favourite works in the artist’s joint show with Fischli/Weiss

Fairsnews

Four decades on, punk’s not dead at Art Basel

Visitors may be surprised to find punk-inspired works across the blue-chip fair

Show me the numbers

What can we learn from analysing Tate Modern’s exhibitions amid the wider London art scene?

Six shows to see during Art Basel

Alleviate your fair-tigue with these exhibitions in and around the Swiss city

Brazilian artist Tunga has died aged 64

Known for his surreal sculptures and performances, he was the first contemporary artist to exhibit work at the Louvre

Arco prepares for lift-off in Lisbon

Fair's first edition, opening tomorrow, is "more focused" than its Spanish counterpart

London's best alternative photography events to zoom in on this weekend

With Photo London in full swing, the capital is awash with photography, from a 24-hours festival in Peckham to a group show in the India Club

Helsinki welcomes time travellers—and offers a glimpse into the heartbreak of others

City Museum re-opens this week with special projects after €13m development

Giacometti and Klein perform unlikely duet for Gagosian

Exhibition's curator draws links between the artists who were "obsessed" with Egyptian art and the cave paintings of Lascaux<br>

Prizesnews

Five art spaces shortlisted for UK's premier museum prize

York Art Gallery, the Victoria &amp; Albert Museum and Bristol's Arnolfini among the contenders for Art Fund prize<br>

Artnews

Turner and The Fighting Temeraire chosen for new £20 note

Bank of England's choice delights the Tate, National Gallery and Margate's Turner Contemporary<br>

Straight to the point: Tate to stage first major show on queer British art

Exhibition joins major surveys on Hockney, Whiteread, Modigliani and Giacometti at the institution next year

Barbarians at the gate: Irish biennial finds inspiration in Easter Rising

Artists take on postcolonial themes at Eva International, as Limerick gears up for its bid to be the 2020 European Capital of Culture