Bill Brandt/Henry Moore, The Hepworth Wakefield review - a matter of perception

★★★★★ REOPENING THIS WEEKEND - BILL BRANDT/HENRY MOORE, THE HEPWORTH WAKEFIELD Cerebral show teases out affinities between photography and sculpture

Cerebral show teases out fascinating affinities between photography and sculpture

Bill Brandt’s photographs and Henry Moore’s studies of people sheltering underground during the Blitz (September 1940 to May 1941) offer glimpses of a world that is, thankfully, lost to us. A year and a half after the end of the bombing campaign, the work of the two artists was published side-by-side in the December 1942 edition of the pioneering illustrated magazine, Lilliput.

United Queendom, Kensington Palace review - rollicking royal tale

Intriguing, enjoyable immersion in Georgian court intrigue

Les Enfants Terribles is the theatre company behind several interesting immersive projects, including Alice's Adventures Underground and Inside Pussy Riot. Now it has joined forces with Historic Royal Palaces to tell the story of two women integral to the Georgian crown – George II's wife, Queen Caroline, and his mistress Henrietta Howard.

Michael Nath: The Treatment review - 'deeds, and language, such as men do use'

★★★★★ MICHAEL NATH: THE TREATMENT A London novel to join the greats

 

A London novel to join the greats

Great writing about – or set in – London has one thing in common: voice. It’s tuned into the city’s multiple frequencies, its sometimes marvellous, sometimes maddening mix of different registers and rhythms.

Grosvenor, Park, Ridout, Soltani, QEH review - inspired collegiality at the highest level

★★★★★ GROSVENOR, PARK, RIDOUT, SOLTANI, QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL Ensemble of four rising stars brings the house down

An ensemble of four rising stars brings the house down

Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss are not the composers you'd hear at a typical chamber music concert. Their early efforts at piano quartets made up the first half of an evening at the Queen Elizabeth Hall with Benjamin Grosvenor and friends that was, in any case, far from typical. Topped off with the mature Brahms’s Third Piano Quartet, wasn’t it going to be too much rugged Alpine rocky road? In the hands of these youthful musicians, it wasn’t. The audience couldn’t get enough of them.

CD: Caribou - Suddenly

The Canadian psyche-pop genre fuser further hones his craft

Around the turn of the millennium, when Dan Snaith started releasing music – initially as Manitoba, then Caribou, and latterly also Daphni – he tended to get lumped in with the folktronica movement. In fact, the closest he came to actual folk was a heavy influence from the more delicate side of late 60s psychedelia.

Panikos Panayi: Migrant City review – the capital of the world

A sprawling, sweeping history of London as an immigrant metropolis

Some menus never change. In 1910, the Loyal British Waiters Society came into being, prompted by “xenophobic resentment at the dominance of foreigners in the restaurant trade”. London’s German Waiters Club, one symptom of the alien rot the bulldog servers aimed to stop, was itself founded in 1869. Almost anywhere, at any period in the capital’s history, from Tudor times until the present day, what Panikos Panayi calls “a backlash from nativist sentiment” has sought to halt and reverse successive waves of immigration.

Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective, Wigmore Hall review - a joyous celebration

★★★★ KALEIDOSCOPE CHAMBER COLLECTIVE A sparky ensemble of starry young musicians

A sparky, shape-shifting ensemble of starry young musicians

Nobody could deny that this was a weekend when we needed cheering up. The place for that was the Wigmore Hall, which played host to a recently formed “shape-shifting” ensemble of superb young soloists. The Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective was launched in 2017 by the violinist Elena Urioste and pianist Tom Poster (incidentally, they got married last summer).

Elysian Singers, SPCMH, Sam Laughton, St Luke’s, Chelsea review - John Cage and friends given a rare airing

★★★★ ELYSIAN SINGERS, SPCMH, SAM LAUGHTON, ST LUKE'S, CHELSEA John Cage and friends given a rare airing

Adventurous choral modernism alongside entertainingly anarchic postmodernism

In my reviewing for theartsdesk I like as much as possible to ski off-piste, reaching areas of repertoire, performer and venue that mainstream coverage doesn't. There is much great music-making that flies, to mix my metaphors, under the radar, but which is well worthy of being written about.

Secrets of the Museum, BBC Two review - the incredible hidden worlds of the V&A

★★★★ SECRETS OF THE MUSEUM, BBC TWO The incredible hidden worlds of the V&A

From Leonardo's notebooks to superstar Dior dresses, they've got it all at the Victoria and Albert

The nation’s public attics – museums – hold a huge jumble of objects collected and used in all sorts of ways to tell us stories of past and present.

Universal Credit: Inside the Welfare State, BBC Two review - drowning in a bureaucratic quagmire

★★★ UNIVERSAL CREDIT: INSIDE THE WELFARE STATE, BBC TWO Drowning in a bureaucratic quagmire

Is it actually possible to reform the benefits system?

The benefits system is feared for its resemblance to a vast poisonous swamp, from whose clutches many travellers fail to return. Universal Credit began to be rolled out in 2013, having been announced in 2010 by Conservative work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith, and was supposed to bulldoze a path through the welfare jungle. However, it remains mired in controversy.