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Art

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Features

Flesh and blood: Gregorio Fernández's 'The Dead Christ'

Sacred visions of godly gore

Tom Lubbock is awed and disturbed by the emotional intensity of Spanish sculpture and painting at the National Gallery

Inside Features

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Worth a closer look

Monday, 19 October 2009

Tom Lubbock: Above is a lung cancer cell, one of a stunning series of electron microscope images in a gallery show. Can science truly be art?

Michael Church: Classical music has no Anish Kapoor, thank God!

Monday, 19 October 2009

Anyone wanting to take the pulse of the fine-art world in its present state should use the BBC’s watch-again facility to catch Stephen Sackur’s interview with Anish Kapoor in BBC World’s Hard Talk slot.

A day in the life of art's hottest city

Saturday, 17 October 2009

As collectors descend on London for the Frieze Art Fair and The New York Times applauds the capital's 'dizzying' array of new exhibitions, Arifa Akbar sets off to see them all in one go

Party Of The Week: No sign of the crunch at Frieze Art Fair week

Friday, 16 October 2009

There may be less art snapped up as the recession bites – but there is certainly no shortage of parties during London's Frieze Art Fair week.

Making a pointe: Martin Creed's latest venture, into the world of ballet, is part of the artist's drive to use as few traditional art materials in his work as possible

A brand new Creed: The Turner prize-winner turns choreographer

Thursday, 15 October 2009

Martin Creed is creating a ballet for Sadler's Wells. Zoë Anderson watches the artist rehearse his latest work in the dance studio

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The man can't paint

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

Tom Lubbock: Damien Hirst's paintings aren't worth looking at

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Dark arts in Turbine Hall

Tuesday, 13 October 2009

Tate Modern's gloomy new installation reflects the spirit of the times, artist says

The back of Hollywood

Ed Ruscha: A man of his words

Tuesday, 13 October 2009

The Hayward Gallery's retrospective of the American pop artist Ed Ruscha reveals an enigmatic marriage of text and image. Tom Lubbock attempts to spell it all out

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FIVE BEST EXHIBITIONS

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Ed Ruscha (Hayward Gallery, London)
He paints the out-of reach: distances, invisibilities, words against clouds and mountains, maps stretching away, silhouettes, blurs... (0871 663 2500) to 10 Jan

Angels of Anarchy (Manchester Art Gallery)
Frida Kahlo, Meret Oppenheim, Dorothea Tanning, Lee Miller, Claude Cahoon: mid-20th-century women artists and their relationship to surrealism. (0161-235 8888) to 10 Jan

John Baldessari (Tate Modern, London)
A witty conceptualist, arranging words and images in short circuits and self-contradictions and blind spots. Is it clever? Is it funny? (020-7887 8888) to 10 Jan

Anish Kapoor (Royal Academy, London)
The master of illusionistic sculptures, with concaves and convexes, reflections and voids and saturated colours. Can you refrain from saying “spirituality”? (020-7300 8000) to 11 Dec

Bridget Riley (Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool)
A brief survey of the work of this abstract magician, from the early black-and white optical cabaret to the later flickering dance in colour. (0151-478 4199) to 13 Dec

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