Stefanovich, Currie, Queen Elizabeth Hall

STEFANOVICH, CURRIE, QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL Dream team for Birtwistle, while the pianist shines in Ligeti and Messiaen

Dream team for Birtwistle, while the pianist shines in Ligeti and Messiaen

Tamara Stefanovich and Colin Currie – a dream team for Birtwistle’s The Axe Manual. Both are new music specialists with a gift for grace and dexterity, even in the most complex works. The score sets up a range of sophisticated relationships between piano and percussion, from sympathetic resonances to complex interplays of stretto and hocket. Yet none of this fazes the two players, nor ever challenges their close ensemble, seemingly telepathic in its precision.

Maggi Hambling, National Gallery

MAGGIE HAMBLING, NATIONAL GALLERY A recent body of work tells of the painter's craft and the stormy Suffolk coast

A recent body of work tells of the painter's craft and the stormy Suffolk coast

I must admit to feeling, briefly, just a little disappointed on first sight of Maggi Hambling’s Walls of Water, nine new paintings on show at the National Gallery. Perhaps it was the evocative title, which promises high drama and instant gratification, something obviously and extravagantly impressive. In short, I was expecting something bigger, an absurd statement because eight out of the nine canvases measure more than six by seven feet. And yet, they are small.

3 Winters, National Theatre

REMEMBERING HOWARD DAVIES 3 Winters, National Theatre, 2014: 'powerful'

Love and war in impressive saga of a Croatian family across three generations

The single spacious room that is the central location of Tena Štivičić’s 3 Winters has seen plenty of ghosts. It’s part of an old Zagreb mansion, and through the course of the play witnesses the diverse events of Croatian history of the last 70-odd years played out in miniature. Three overlapping time-schemes chart the full rotations of surrounding society: from the war-end move towards Communism in 1945, through 1990 eve-of-break-up Yugoslavia, and on to 2011, not long before EU accession.

Conflict, Time, Photography, Tate Modern

A powerful exhibition that takes the long view on the aftermath of war

This huge exhibition is an awesome and terrifying compilation of photographs of the sites of conflict, and the remnants of wars and conflicts of all kinds – local, civil, short, long, global, technological, industrial and hand-to-hand. Taken from the mid 19th century to the present, the images – hundreds, perhaps even well over a thousand –  are oblique and often incomprehensible or unidentifiable without the expansive wall captions. This is a show requiring us to read as well as look. 

Pelléas et Mélisande, Philharmonia, Salonen, RFH

PELLÉAS ET MÉLISANDE, PHILHARMONIA, SALONEN, RFH A Pelléas of echoes and allusions, and a dramatic revelation

A Pelléas of echoes and allusions, and a dramatic revelation

In an operatic world in which the director is an increasingly despotic king, it’s good to be reminded that, sometimes, not staging an opera is the most radical reading of all. No elaborate set or concept dominated David Edwards’s one-off Pelléas et Mélisande at the Royal Festival Hall last night. There were just suggestions, allusions, echoes. And a cast – what a cast – that came close to perfection.

Concerning Violence

CONCERNING VIOLENCE Frantz Fanon’s decolonization seen through 1970s Swedish television Africa archives

Frantz Fanon’s decolonization seen through 1970s Swedish television Africa archives

In Concerning Violence Göran Hugo Olsson has created an almanac documentary drawing on material from Swedish television archives, filmed by a number of directors in Africa, largely in the 1970s. It’s fascinating footage, covering a number of perspectives on what was happening in the continent over that decade, from the frontline guerilla wars with the MPLA in Angola and FRELIMO in Mozambique, to industrial unrest in Liberia, and apparently matter-of-fact interviews with white settlers in Rhodesia and elsewhere.

Imagine... Anselm Kiefer, BBC One

IMAGINE...ANSELM KIEFER, BBC ONE Entertaining but two-dimensional, Alan Yentob's account glosses over the artist's flaws

Entertaining but two-dimensional, Alan Yentob's account glosses over the artist's flaws

Anselm Kiefer reminds me a bit of someone I once worked for. Totally unpredictable, and possessed of a formidable intelligence and creativity, his mental leaps can be bewilderingly hard to follow, leading occasionally to truly breathtaking results, but crashing and burning just as often. Everyone else, like me, or in Kiefer’s case his long-suffering assistant Tony, not to mention poor old Alan Yentob, has to trot along behind, barely able to keep up with the barrage of ideas, questions and orders, let alone judge whether any of it is any good.

Emily Carr, Dulwich Picture Gallery

EMILY CARR, DULWICH PICTURE GALLERY An exhibition celebrating Canada's unsung modernist

An exhibition celebrating Canada's unsung modernist

Walking into this exhibition is a bit like walking into a great forest. The dark green walls are hung all around with paintings of trees; we look up through branches that spiral dizzyingly skyward, while the upwards sweep of vast trunks seem relentlessly, tangibly full of life. Some of these paintings verge on abstraction, the forms of tree trunks simplified and reduced to an arrangement of planes, with spatial recession represented entirely through colour.

Ashton Mixed Bill, Royal Ballet

ASHTON MIXED BILL, ROYAL BALLET Symphonic Variations is the highlight among fine works by supreme British choreographer

Symphonic Variations is the highlight among fine works by supreme British choreographer

This morning, those who follow ballet on both sides of the Atlantic might be feeling a bit like the male soloists at the beginning of Ashton’s Scènes de Ballet: turning their heads sharply, almost pantomimically, from side to side. Over there, in New York, Wendy Whelan, the prima ballerina retiring after a 30-year career with City Ballet, made her farewell in a programme heavy on modern masters Wheeldon and Ratmansky, including a world première.

Lord of the Flies, Matthew Bourne's New Adventures, Sadler's Wells

LORD OF THE FLIES, MATTHEW BOURNE'S NEW ADVENTURES, SADLER'S WELLS Golding's tale of schoolboy savagery becomes superb dance theatre, with real schoolboys

Golding's tale of schoolboy savagery becomes superb dance theatre, with real schoolboys

New Adventures, the name of Matthew Bourne's company, has a ruddy-cheeked, Boys’ Own ring to it that has – until now – been rather belied by his oeuvre, which includes a dance version of Edward Scissorhands, as well as dark retellings of all the traditional story ballets. But the New Adventure which rolled into Sadler’s Wells last night really is an adventure – an adaptation of William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, the desert island schoolboy story heavy with allegory about the propensity of human beings to descend into barbarism.