Mohammed Sami: After the Storm, Blenheim Palace – A sorrowful lament for the casualties of war
In this exhibition, the Iraqi-born artist has attentively responded to his grand setting with nuanced paintings that bemoan bloodshed
![The Grinder by Mohammed Sami](https://cdn.statically.io/img/www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/art/2024/07/08/TELEMMGLPICT000384528084_17204356464390_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqtQDwr_sedNJVv0bm9GPmGMwZgCewa-xkrckcIXHk6m8.jpeg?imwidth=350)
Jump to content
In this exhibition, the Iraqi-born artist has attentively responded to his grand setting with nuanced paintings that bemoan bloodshed
Covid-19 and a shortage of valuable works in the UK market have seen sales totals dwindle year on year, but all is not lost
From the colourful world of Henry Moore to Hockney’s travels back in time, these are the shows not to miss
We could fix the culture crisis by reforming the Arts Council, embracing philanthropy and promoting international collaboration
Can new research determine whether biology dictates the toys our children love?
There are few things more photogenic than a beautiful ceiling. Here are a few worth craning your neck for
This exhibition celebrates the long-sidelined spouses and defies their conventional reduction to little more than a memorable rhyme
The V&A’s slick exhibition about her four-decade career is the first of its kind – but we get no nearer to the real Naomi Campbell
His magnificent 1927 mural The Expedition in Pursuit of Rare Meats was deemed ‘offensive’ by the Tate. Of course, it’s nothing of the sort
The Bahamian artist’s monuments to overlooked figures from black history are imaginative and thought-provoking, if a little reductive
More than 50 years on, the photographer’s images of South Africa have lost none of their unsettling power
A heap of tedious, shambling parochialism and humdrum bilge, this year’s show may well be a new low
A stark decline in visitors might stem from modern celebrity’s new wild west: too many famous people, fewer icons. Can Tussauds survive?
Snobs love to snub the Royal Academy Summer show – but it’s heaven for those sick of being lectured to by smug curators
The show is billed as a study of the link between Pink Floyd’s music and visitors’ brainwaves – but it’s a glorified Instagram opportunity
This year’s Serpentine display has opened. But are pavilions simply expensive, over-engineered follies – or do they have deeper meaning?
A new exhibition at Bethlem’s Museum of the Mind reveals how Charles Lutyens became the trailblazer for art therapy
Minsuk Cho’s elegant commission borrows from Korean tradition to pay homage to the architectural importance of emptiness
Blockbuster films by Spielberg and co put a US victory spin on D-Day, overlooking British forces. The new Churchill centre will change that
This X-rated show by the South African artist deserves a chance, because much of what it contains is powerful, original, and beautiful