Ravilious, Dulwich Picture Gallery

RAVILIOUS, DULWICH PICTUE GALLERY The ravishing and gently surreal works of one of Britain's greatest watercolourists

The ravishing and gently surreal works of one of Britain's greatest watercolourists

Look at me, and think of England. This marvellous array of quirky, idiosyncratic watercolours by Eric Ravilious (1903-1942) from the 1930s until his premature death during wartime when his plane, on an air sea rescue mission for which he had volunteered, crashed in Iceland. It is full of memorable and haunting pictures.

theartsdesk in New York: On Kawara at the Guggenheim Museum

THEARTSDESK IN NEW YORK: ON KAWARA AT THE GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM A powerful meditation on time through dating, mapping and listing

A powerful meditation on time through dating, mapping and listing

On a snowy day in early spring in New York, the On Kawara – Silence show at the Guggenheim is unlikely to warm you up. His date paintings, postcards, telegrams and other coldly ur-conceptual accountings spiral up those famous white Frank Lloyd Wright stairs, seemingly ad infinitum. But it’s a powerful, hypnotic experience, one that seeps into your subconscious and becomes a meditation on time and space.

Brighton Festival: The Locations That Make the Festival

BRIGHTON FESTIVAL: THE LOCATIONS THAT MAKE THE FESTIVAL A colourful guide to the 10 varied spaces inhabited by this year's eclectic festival

A colourful guide to the 10 varied spaces inhabited by this year's eclectic festival

Andrew Comben, CEO of the Brighton Festival, chooses ten locations that have resonance with the annual event. He talks about their past and future but, most particularly, what will be happening this May

Brighton Festival is all about the spaces and people of the city,” he explains, “Some of these spaces are especially evocative. They make artists think about doing things in different ways and make audiences respond accordingly. We have to strategise, sometimes taking over places that are used for other things most of the time. It’s always an adventure.”

theartsdesk in Bilbao: Niki de Saint Phalle at the Guggenheim Museum

THEARTSDESK IN BILBAO: NIKI DE SAINT PHALLE AT THE GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM Brides, whores and nanas: the visceral works that draw on the artist's difficult life

Brides, whores and nanas: the visceral works that draw on the artist's difficult life

This is work that wears its heart on its sleeve. That’s what gets you in the end in this big retrospective of the work of Niki de Saint Phalle.

Painting Paradise: The Art of the Garden, The Queen's Gallery

PAINTING PARADISE: THE ART OF THE GARDEN, THE QUEEN'S GALLERY From Eden to an embodiment of the power of the state: the garden in myth and reality

From Eden to an embodiment of the power of the state: the garden in myth and reality

The young, rather homely yet grand gentleman is lounging under a tree, behind him a formal knot garden. His costume is extravagant and rich, and his hat is charming. This exquisite 1590s miniature by Isaac Oliver, watercolour on vellum, titled indeed A Young Man Seated Under a Tree, is the first depiction in art of a knot garden; flowers and plants by the tree are meticulously detailed, and in the background is the classic Renaissance knot garden. 

10 Questions for Artist Marcus Coates

10 QUESTIONS FOR ARTIST MARCUS COATES Eccentric visionary talks birds, shamanism, intoxicated animals and the Brighton Festival

Eccentric visionary talks birds, shamanism, intoxicated animals and the Brighton Festival

Marcus Coates (b. 1968) is an artist who specialises in projects that involve the natural world. Graduating from the Royal Academy School in the early Nineties, by the millennium he was attracting attention for filmed art events that were both eccentric and thought-provoking.

Defining Beauty: The Body in Ancient Greek Art, British Museum

DEFINING BEAUTY: THE BODY IN ANCIENT GREEK ART, BRITISH MUSEUM More than the sum of its parts: an exploration of how the human form was perfected

More than the sum of its parts: an exploration of how the human form was perfected

We think we know it when we see it. But how, pray, do we define beauty? The ancient Greeks thought they had the measure of it. In the 4th century BC, the “chief forms of beauty,” according to Aristotle, were “order, symmetry and clear delineation.” A century earlier, during the golden age of Athens, Polykleitos, one of the ancient world’s greatest sculptors, set out the precise ratios for the ideal male form in a treatise he called The Canon.

Wellington: Triumphs, Politics and Passions, National Portrait Gallery

WELLINGTON: TRIUMPH, POLITICS AND PASSIONS, NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY A masterly portrait of the Iron Duke that draws out a contradictory personality

A masterly portrait of the Iron Duke that draws out a contradictory personality

One masterpiece and two superb portraits both dominate and sum up in vivid fashion the complex personality, long life and astonishing trajectory of the first Duke of Wellington

Joshua Reynolds, Wallace Collection

JOSHUA REYNOLDS, WALLACE COLLECTION The portraitist's experiments in paint buckle under the weight of too much information

The portraitist's experiments in paint buckle under the weight of too much information

The grand but domestic setting of Hertford House, home of the Wallace Collection, makes a fitting backdrop to an exhibition of paintings by Joshua Reynolds. The Marquesses of Hertford acquired some 25 paintings by Reynolds in the artist's lifetime, and after it, and the 12 that remain in the collection form the focus of this exhibition.

Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty, Victoria & Albert Museum

A romantic 'hero-artist' or just a designer with a melancholic imagination?

Alexander McQueen designed some dresses to die for. Dominating a wood-panelled room dedicated to Romantic Nationalism, in acknowledgement of his Scottish origins, is a crimson cape worn over a simple white dress. The high collar, puffed sleeves and long train lend the shimmering red taffeta a baronial splendour perfect for dramatic entrances.