Analogue - Rock Portraits by Tom Sheehan, Lomography Gallery Store East

From Björk to the Bunnymen, 40 years of rock star portraits by much-travelled lensman

I've known rock photographer Tom Sheehan since we worked together at the Melody Maker in the 1980s, but even I didn't know that his stellar career stretches back "almost 40 years", or so it says in the programme notes for his new exhibition, Analogue, at the Lomography Gallery Store East in Spitalfields. Anyway, anyone who's ever been anyone in the great pop and rock malarky has been memorably photographed by Sheehan (or "painted with light," as he might facetiously put it).

Georgians Revealed, British Library

GEORGIANS REVEALED, BRITISH LIBRARY An entertaining look in the mirror as middle-class Britain discovers taste and leisure (and enjoy our gallery)

An entertaining look in the mirror as middle-class Britain discovers taste and leisure

The Georgians are in our marrow, and two of them in particular. The dawn of the age gave us Handel, who came over from Hanover with George I. Then at the sunset came the ever-exalted Jane Austen, who dedicated Emma in mock deference to the bloated Prince Regent. And in between there are all those elegant terraces in dark-brown brick, desirable survivors of the Industrial Revolution and the Luftwaffe.

Stanley Spencer: Heaven in a Hell of War, Somerset House

STANLEY SPENCER: HEAVEN IN A HELL OF WAR, SOMERSET HOUSE Away from the dimly lit chapel for which they were painted, we can see Spencer's war paintings in painstaking detail

Away from the dimly lit chapel for which they were painted, we can see Spencer's war paintings in painstaking detail

Stanley Spencer’s painting Map Reading shows us, in dizzying perspectives and changes of scale, a mounted cavalry officer reading a huge unfurled map concerning the now forgotten campaign in Macedonia in World War I, his horse nibbling oats all the while. Clustered all around his giant figure, ordinary soldiers surround their commander, fanned out at oblique angles to his central figure. The men are lying about in various casual poses, resting, or are perhaps out of this world, in more ways than one. The whole is framed by gorgeous outbursts of white blossom.

Masterpieces of Chinese Painting 700-1900, Victoria & Albert Museum

MASTERPIECES OF CHINESE PAINTING, V&A From Buddhas to beggars, and from poets to courtiers, myriad tales unfold in a stunning exhibition

From Buddhas to beggars, and from poets to courtiers, myriad tales unfold in a stunning exhibition

Masterpieces of Chinese Painting 700-1900 is just what it says: a spectacular collection of nearly 80 banners, handscrolls, hanging scrolls and fans, gathered from major collections in China and Japan – many of which have never travelled west before – as well as the United States and Europe. 

Louise Bourgeois, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art

LOUISE BOURGEOIS, SCOTTISH NATIONAL GALLERY OF MODERN ART A thoughtful survey of the artist's late works which highlight a single-minded drive for precision of expression

A thoughtful survey of the artist's late works which highlight a single-minded drive for precision of expression

There’s a giant spider in the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art’s new exhibition of Louise Bourgeois. Her trademark spider and the fact that she lived to 98 – working into her final days – are probably two of the best-known things about her. The story spun by the spider and the other exhibits, in an exhibition entitled A Woman Without Secrets, makes a fascinating walk through the final years and lifelong obsessions of the French-born artist who did not come to real prominence until her early 70s in her adopted USA.

Turner Prize 2013, Ebrington Barracks, Derry-Londonderry

TURNER PRIZE 2013, EBRINGTON BARRACKS, DERRY-LONDONDERRY There's a definite feel-good vibe to this year's exhibition of the four shortlisted artists

There's a definite feel-good vibe to this year's exhibition of the four shortlisted artists

This year, if you don’t live in Ireland, you’ll have to take a plane or a boat to see the Turner Prize exhibition. But the effort will be nicely rewarded, for Derry (or Londonderry/Doire – wherever your affiliations take you) is a beautiful city, and it’s also the first UK City of Culture, so there’s plenty going on. And aside from the tempting premise of the exhibition, the building that’s been specially converted to house it is an inspired choice, not only because it makes for a very good exhibition space, but because it carries such symbolic weight.

The Male Nude, Wallace Collection

THE MALE NUDE, WALLACE COLLECTION The subtle difference between high art and gay pin-ups

The subtle difference between high art and gay pin-ups

It is amazing how perceptions and attitudes change. Think of a nude and the chances are you will imagine a naked woman since, nowadays, the female body virtually monopolises the genre; naked men scarcely make an appearance in mainstream culture. This changed briefly in the 1970s, when American photographer Robert Mapplethorpe brought the male nude into focus with countless images celebrating masculine beauty. After his death in 1989, though, the naked male returned to the closet, relegated to porn movies and gay magazines.

Daumier: Visions of Paris, Royal Academy

TAD AT 5 - ON VISUAL ART: DAUMIER: VISIONS OF PARIS, ROYAL ACADEMY An exhilarating survey of the French caricaturist and painter

An exhilarating survey of the French caricaturist and painter

From Hogarth through to Gillray and Cruikshank, it was Georgian England that gave rise to a graphic tradition of satire. The powerful were lampooned and the pretensions and avarice of the upper and aspiring classes duly ridiculed. But the poor did not escape moral censure. Far from it. Then as now we had the virtuous and the feckless poor, and it was the love of gin that often bought the latter down.

Whistler and the Thames: An American in London, Dulwich Picture Gallery

WHISTLER AND THE THAMES: AN AMERICAN IN LONDON, DULWICH PICTURE GALLERY The river views find London's resident American becoming himself

The river views find London's resident American becoming himself

Dulwich Picture Gallery, the oldest publicly accessible painting collection in England, is hardly on the bank of the Thames, but its compilation of prints, drawings, watercolours and paintings by James McNeill Whistler (1834-1902) concentrates on his absorption with London’s river. The shifting light of sky and water, not to mention working dockside life, which obsessed him during his lifelong residence in the city provides not only an overview of Whistler’s evolution as an artist but an evocation of the working life of the river which is long gone.