Portfolios of photographs, art and design

Gallery: Derwent Art Prize

The inaugural prize for drawing celebrates the artist's most basic tool and provides a superb showcase

You can use a computer to draw, as Hockney does, every day on his iPad, yet, despite all the technological advances the 21st century has thrown our way, the pencil continues to be the artist’s most basic tool. And though there are those who lament, as they have done for decades, the “deskilling” of art, dismissing the art they don’t like or perhaps feel alienated by, drawing not only persists but remains fundamental: just as writers still write novels with plots to recreate the world filtered through their imaginations, artists still put pencil to paper to do the same.

Wild things: Conductors at the 2013 Proms

WILD THINGS! CONDUCTORS AT THE PROMS Feast on our annual gallery of baton men and women

Feast on our annual gallery of baton men and women

"What I’m looking for is that fraction of a second that at least I could remember the concert by." At the start of the 2013 BBC Proms season, photographer Chris Christodoulou let theartsdesk into the secret of snapping conductors at work. Now that the Proms are over for another year, we publish not the official shots, but the ones which are simply too quirky to be released by the BBC press office. These images may not particularly flatter their subjects, but they do capture what it is to be a silent maestro magically conjuring sound from the massed ranks of an orchestra.

Prom 2: The Doctor Who Prom in Pictures

PROM 2: THE DOCTOR WHO PROM IN PICTURES The stars turn out to celebrate the show's 50th jubilee

The stars turn out to celebrate the show's 50th jubilee

There's the First Night and there's the Last Night. Nowadays among the staples of the two-month world-famous festival of music at the Royal Albert Hall, there is also the Doctor Who Prom. Last night, to mark the 50th anniversary of the resurgent TV sci-fi show, a celebration was laid on featuring Murray Gold's music from the last eight years of Doctor Who.

The Fine Art of Shooting Conductors

THE FINE ART OF SHOOTING CONDUCTORS Chris Christodoulou celebrates his 33rd year at the Proms with a sumptuous gallery of favourite portraits

Chris Christodoulou celebrates his 33rd year at the Proms with a sumptuous gallery of favourite portraits

Chris Christodoulou has been photographing conductors at the BBC Proms since 1981. Many attending the Proms at the Royal Albert Hall may well have attempted to spot him. They can give up on that game herewith. As he explains to theartsdesk, the venue with its many curtains and nooks allows him to work discreetly. (If you want to know what he looks like, see below right.) We have been featuring Chris’s pictures in an annual gallery since 2010. This year we have asked him what makes a good picture of a conductor, and how he goes about securing it.

Performers: A Season in Photographs

PERFORMERS: A SEASON IN PHOTOGRAPHS Laurie Lewis, the pre-eminent photographer of opera and ballet, shares an exclusive record of the 2012-13 season

Laurie Lewis, the pre-eminent photographer of opera and ballet, shares an exclusive record of the 2012-13 season

A stage performance in any art form communicates through sound and motion. A photographer's task is to capture the dramatic experience in the silence and stillness of the 2D image. In the worlds of ballet and opera, none does it with more commitment to truth and drama than the great Laurie Lewis. To mark the end of the 2012-13 season, we present 25 images selected by the photographer exclusively for theartsdesk.

PUNK+ - Sheila Rock's portraits from the frontline

PUNK+ - SHEILA ROCK'S PORTRAITS FROM THE FRONTLINE Introducing the definitive collection of punk images by the American photographer who witnessed a revolution

Introducing the definitive collection of punk images by the American photographer who witnessed a revolution

The historians of punk are in full flow. Jon Savage's book England's Dreaming and the BBC Four's documentary series Punk Britannia have documented much of what needs to be said. But punk was as much a visual statement of intent as a musical one, which is why a new book of photographs by Sheila Rock is such a welcome addition to the punk library. Rock was there at the start, taking pictures for NME, Smash Hits and, most importantly, The Face, where her images did much to establish its commitment to style. 

Gallery: The Springtime of the Renaissance

GALLERY: THE SPRINGTIME OF THE RENAISSANCE Browse a selection of images from the Palazzo Strozzi exhibition

Browse a selection of images from the Palazzo Strozzi exhibition

The images in this gallery illustrate some of the links and juxtapositions made in The Springtime of the Renaissance. Classical statues which influenced Florentine artists, works reunited for the first time in centuries, sculptural forms reproduced in two-dimensional paintings (see main image) - you can find all of them below. The 20 images are arranged in 10 pairs, each of which represents a theme of the exhibition.

Gallery: Art Projects and The Catlin Guide at the London Art Fair

ART PROJECTS AND THE CATLIN GUIDE AT LONDON ART FAIR A leading showcase of today's most exciting contemporary artists as well as 40 of the UK's brightest graduates

A leading showcase of today's most exciting contemporary artists as well as 40 of the UK's brightest graduates

The London Art Fair may not have the international heft or VIP glamour of Frieze, but for 25 years it’s been the place to see and buy the best of British modern art.

Photo Gallery: They That Are Left

Brian David Stevens' decade-long project to photograph veterans on Remembrance Sunday

For the past 10 years Brian David Stevens has been taking photographic portraits of veterans on Remembrance Sunday. The images play on the notion of the unknown soldier. Each subject is portrayed without the distinguishing marks of regiment or rank or even any clue to the part of the Armed Forces in which they served. “Faces, only,” says Stevens. “Each deep-etched with who they are and what they did, that we might look, and think - and thank them.”

Photo Gallery: Everything was Moving - Photography from the 60s and 70s, Barbican Gallery

EVERYTHING WAS MOVING: PHOTOGRAPHY FROM THE 60S AND 70S, BARBICAN GALLERY Last chance to catch aeeply disturbing exhibition, closing 13 Jan

A thoughtful and deeply disturbing exhibition which manages to speak with unparalleled directness

Take the day, and a stiff drink afterwards, as you’ll need it for this thoughtful and deeply disturbing exhibition. A picture, goes the cliché, is worth a thousand words, and nowhere more so than in this heartbreaking, beautiful and affecting anthology, which manages to speak with unparalleled directness, yet with nuanced subtlety.