Drawing
-
In our Students Express series you have the chance to exhibit work and share ideas with readers.
-
Cory Arcangel swaps canvas for clickbait, Ai Weiwei gives his verdict on the EU and the weird world of Victorian medical models – all in your weekly art dispatch
-
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
The Flemish are detailed, the Dutch are florid – but it’s Rubens who steals the show -
Kate Greenaway-winning illustrator William Grill shares sketches he made drawing the wolves at Wild Spirit Wolf sanctuary in New Mexico to research his breath-takingly beautiful new book The Wolves Of Currumpaw
-
Sketching requires looking at objects in a different way – it’s all in the detail, writes Daniel Glaser
-
The 78-year-old’s Germanic imagination remains as courageous as ever with this visceral and erotic exhibition that unearths perverse beauty in human decline
-
Saville made her name with giant paintings of fleshy, flawed bodies. She talks about being bankrolled by Charles Saatchi, how having children is changing her art – and the joy of late-night vacuuming
-
McDonalds mixes with Soviet-style art, Damien Hirst’s leaky vitrines, and Pompeii’s bungled facelift – all in your weekly art dispatch
-
'No sketching': V&A; signs betray everything the museum stands for
Oliver WainwrightNo visit should be complete without tripping over a skinny-jeaned student clutching a sketchbook. This draconian diktat denies visitors their art education
-
A Grand Tour of the Midlands, Top Gear’s misguided spin around the Cenotaph and Britain’s best new architects – all in your weekly art dispatch
-
A chance to see an asparagus forest come to life and witness the strange little men frolicking in your loo roll… iconic illustrator Serge Bloch opens a window into his mind with these re-imaginings of ordinary objects as gifs and hopes you want to come and play too
-
Tacita Dean was so surprised to see clouds in LA, it got her drawing again. From Turner to Hockney, why are British artists always under the weather?
-
The comic genius of Shrigley, the accidental genius of the restored Fortress of Matrera, and the forgotten genius of Giorgione – all in your weekly art dispatch
-
Jo Weaver’s Little One tells of a journey through the seasons of a mother bear and bear cub, evocatively rendered in quietly beautiful charcoal illustrations. Here she explains how she created her debut picture book
-
Jonathan Jones on art Brian Sewell's art collection is up for grabs – what does it reveal?