Portfolios of photographs, art and design

The Hitchcock Players: Ingrid Bergman, Notorious

THE HITCHCOCK PLAYERS: INGRID BERGMAN, NOTORIOUS The master's non-blonde muse is sent out to spy for Uncle Sam

The master's non-blonde muse is sent out to spy for Uncle Sam

Before the blonde, there was Bergman. In the second half of the 1940s, Hitchcock cast Ingrid Bergman three times, and on each occasion asked her to incarnate a different kind of leading lady. In the film noir Spellbound (1945) she was a psychoanalyst defrosted by Gregory Peck, and she played the loyal sister of a convict in 19th-century Australia in Hitchcock's first colour film, the costumed period piece Under Capricorn (1949).

Intimate Exposure: Marilyn Monroe 50 Years On

TAD AT 5: MARILYN MONROE EXPOSED She died in 1962, and still nobody photographs better

She died half a century ago, and still nobody photographs better as a new collection underlines

It’s 50 years since Marilyn Monroe died alone on the night of August 4, 1962, from swallowing too many sleeping pills. The sad story soon became the stuff of legend. When they found her, she was still slumped over the telephone receiver; she had been ringing around, desperately trying to get help. Rumours soon spread about her relationship with Senator Robert Kennedy and possible access to state secrets, which gave rise to far-fetched conspiracy theories implicating the CIA in her death.

Gallery: Collecting the Olympic Games, British Library

Another time, another time: images of the London Olympiad of 1908

As London 2012 finally settles into the blocks for its two-week dash after seven years of preparation, the British Library has cast a nostalgic look back to the two previous Olympiads hosted by the city, in 1908 and 1948. The story the images tell is of the changing face of the Olympics. Once upon a time amateurism unquestioningly held sway and intensely focused athletes didn't sneer at Baron de Coubertin's long-lost concept that it's the taking part that counts and the notion of sponsorship was still a twinkle in Lausanne's eye.

theartsdesk at the Latitude Festival 2012: Squeeze, Squelch

THEARTSDESK AT THE LATITUDE FESTIVAL: Glorious mud at the festival for all tastes. Enter Lang Lang on a gondola

Glorious mud at the festival for all tastes. Enter Lang Lang on a gondola

As a giggling toddler posed for a photograph next to a pink sheep, a man in a Barbour jacket moaned about losing his garlic-crusher. On the lake, smitten newlyweds enjoyed a gondola ride, while, somewhere else, an elderly couple watched a show so moving it made them cry. Yes, this could have happened in one place only – the leafy surroundings of Henham Park, near Southwold in Suffolk, at Latitude Festival.

The Art of Conducting 2011

THE ART OF CONDUCTING: A fabulous gallery of Proms maestros in eye-catching action

Chris Christodoulou's photographs from the Proms show conductors giving their all

The greatest music festival of them is once more upon us. Throughout our extensive coverage of last year's BBC Proms, we featured the remarkable work of photographer Chris Christodoulou. We have asked Chris to select his favourite pictures of conductors at work, and we present them again for your entertainment and enlightenment as the world's greatest conductors again take to the podium for the summer to show exactly what it takes to do what they do.

Gallery: Hop Farm Festival

HOP FARM GALLERY: theartsdesk photographer Imelda Michalczyk's images from a weekend of music-making in Kent

theartsdesk photographer Imelda Michalczyk's images from a weekend of music-making in Kent

Brand-free, eschewing sponsorship, and letting kids in for free, the Hop Farm Festival in Paddock Wood, Kent, has risen steadily in stature to become one of the major fixtures on the UK festival circuit. If the festival is young, most of its audience and stars are of a certain age. Last year saw Morrisey, Patti Smith, Lou Reed and Manu Chao headline, while Prince played his only UK show there.

Photo Gallery: Top Deck

Images from the top of East London double deckers

In popular myth, Margaret Thatcher reportedly said that any man still travelling by bus after the age of 30 could consider himself a failure. The quote is almost certainly apocryphal, but it stuck in the public consciousness because it sounded like the kind of thing that an arch-conservative would say; cars were the preserve of the rich and successful, whereas buses were how the poor, the failed and the antisocial travelled around the city.

Art Gallery: London Art Fair 2012

Previewing a tantalising showcase on a huge variety of British art

Featuring over 100 galleries specialising in modern and contemporary British art, the London Art Fair is a January highlight for those who prefer a more relaxed atmosphere to that offered by the international VIP frenzy of Frieze. From the great names of the 20th century to leading contemporary artists and emerging talent, the fair offers a tantalising showcase on a huge variety of British art.

Photo Gallery: Ken Russell - A Retrospective

KEN RUSSELL - A RETROSPECTIVE: The late director's flavoursome snaps from the Fifties

The director's flavoursome snaps from the Fifties go on show

An exhibition of Ken Russell's photographs, taken in the 1950s, spirits you back to a London still in recovery from the trauma of war. And yet seen through the prism of Russell's lively eye, always on the look-out for mischief and absurdity, an era we now view as both innocent and slightly dull appears anything but. He took a series of pictures in Hyde Park designed to lampoon ridiculous local by-laws. He had fun with stilts and penny farthings and assorted props. Above all, he celebrated the great British penchant for dressing up.

Art Gallery: Egyptian and Nubian Galleries, Ashmolean Museum

EGYPTIAN AND NUBIAN GALLERIES, ASHMOLEAN MUSEUM: A newly designed space housing 5,000 artefacts from 100 sites

A newly designed space to house 5,000 artefacts from 100 sites

The Ashmolean Museum opens the doors to its Egyptian and Nubian galleries tomorrow and in these six refurbished rooms you’ll be able to see one of the greatest collections (among some 40,000 antiquities) outside Cairo. Designed by the architect Rick Mather, the galleries cover 5,000 years of human history, including objects that have been part of the museum’s collection since it opened in 1683. These have been gathered from more than 100 archaeological sites in Egypt and what is now Sudan (Nubia).