Exhibitions
Venice Architecture Biennale: Architecture as a living organism
Rem Koolhaas’s Biennale reflects his discipline not just as a technical process but as the embodiment of human experience across the ages.
Malevich reigns supreme in London exhibitions
The Art Newspaper reports on Malevich exhibitions, which reference previous shows of his work
(Inter)facing the future at Barbican's 'Digital Revolution'
Exploring the impact of digital technology on art, music, film and design
Disputes in Russia concerning the authenticity of many works attributed to Malevich circulating the Russian art market
As a major Malevich show opens in London, claims grow that the avant-garde market is still plagued by the fakes
It's complicated: Tate on Kazimir Malevich and the West
As a touring show opens at Tate Modern, is a rounded picture finally emerging?
Artist Interview: Why Tillmans is returning to Russia
The artist is taking part in Manifesta 10, despite the country’s anti-gay laws
Academic warmth and icy antiquities at Kallos gallery launch
Lorne Thyssen's antiquities gallery opened in London’s Davies Street last month
Art from the Great War on display at the Leopold Museum
“The art world did not stand still between 1914 and 1918”
Tate Modern’s Matisse show is a cut above
London, and then New York, will see the largest number of Matisse’s paper constructions ever assembled
Taipei takes attendance top spot with loans from China
Asian art is in the ascendancy globally, while in Europe, Salvador Dalí reigns supreme
"Unedited History: Iran 1960-2014" at Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville will emphasise the survival of modernity in Iranian history
The exhibition will contain works by 24 artists, from three pivotal historical moments: 1960-70, the revolutionary era, and the post-war period
What's On in Paris: Nostalgia is back in '94 with Antoni Tàpies and Jean-Pierre Bertrand retrospectives
Also, Meyer Vaisman's grandiose taxidermies and Elaine Strutevant's almost-replicas
Bureaucracy and censorship: a palpable thaw in Saudi Arabia
But words are now more risky than art
More questions than answers after ‘miraculous’ Russian avant-garde show
Specialists express concern about lack of provenance for works by artists including Rodchenko and Goncharova in Italian exhibition
Following the warp and weft of time: Tapestries in all their glory at the Met
Tapestry is as alluring a medium to today’s artists as Renaissance ones
Phyllida Barlow: the artist working with the Tate collection to interrogate the essential nature of sculpture
Since retiring from teaching at the Slade school after 40 years, the sculptor has found her large, site-specific works in great demand—not least at Tate Britain
India’s first Pop artist Bhupen Khakhar coming to Tate Modern
Not yet publicly announced, it is scheduled for 2016
The best that was and will be: Curator interviews
Curators and scholars on their key exhibitions of 2013, 2014 and beyond.
Cheim & Read’s year of women artists
Exhibitions included artists Joan Mitchell, Jenny Holzer and more
National Portrait Gallery joins a season of shows marking the centenary of the Great War
Our pick of the exhibitions commemorating the First World War
Pandemonium as celebrations of Derek Jarman kick off
King’s College show opens events marking the 20th anniversary of the film-maker’s death
Victoria and Albert Museum, Jameel Prize 3
The Jameel Prize show at the Victoria and Albert Museum looks for the best in Islamic or Islamic-inspired art
Marina Abramovic dies on stage
The ceremony is part of the US debut of “The Life and Death of Marina Abramovic”
Norton Museum presents largest ever exhibition in the US of pictures made with Polaroid film
Click, whirr… before instant went digital
Eva Hesse and Gego feature in parallel shows at their native city’s Kunsthalle
Hamburger Kunsthalle exhibits the work of two artists who both fled Germany in the 1930s
Isa Genzken gets a MoMA show
German artist’s first major US retrospective presents career of constant reinvention
Elmgreen & Dragset have created everything from a film script to kitchen units for their installation at the V&A
The artists make themselves at home
Purposeful destruction: Smashing art at the Tate Britain
Tate Britain traces the driving forces and ideologies behind a 500-year history of iconoclasm
Come on in, make yourself at home at the V&A
Elmgreen & Dragset install a house at the Victoria and Albert Museum
Art and the appetite for destruction: Histories of British Iconoclasm on now at Tate Britain
Tate Britain examines the history of those who have targeted art, from Henry VIII to the present

