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Catherine Opie, Brigitte Lacombe and Tacita Dean tackle fellow artists at the International Center of Photography
A New York show of 19th-century artists evokes a changing country searching for a new identity through art
A new exhibition offers an anthropological excursion into a special US food culture
Works from the cosmetics heir’s holdings reflect his taste for the imperfect, unfinished and grotesque
A frank artistic response to economic and political fractures is not helped by curatorial hectoring
A dazzling New York exhibition shows the richness, humour and humanity of this ancient culture
The American sculptor engages deeply with how we can understand and revisit painful histories
Mid-career survey in New York presents the Chicago artist as a virtuoso accumulator of objects powered by memory and loss
Starting in a tiny space, JAM changed the art world by breaking down racial barriers
The painter emerges as a painstaking and protective observer of the city in an immaculate exhibition
She was desperate to be known for more than her furry teacup but this retrospective is uneven in its expansiveness
A retrospective of this consummate painter of modern urban life also focuses on the muse who brought his work into focus
‘Cubism and the Trompe l’Oeil Tradition’ at the Metropolitan Museum sparkles with works by Picasso, Braque and Gris
This survey of the 118-year dynasty reveals the outward manifestations of their power but little of their inner turmoil
A show at New York’s American Folk Art Museum hopes to redeem the reputation of the tailor-turned-painter
He anticipated today’s deluge of pets, selfies and sunsets but a MoMA retrospective casts doubt on his uniqueness
The Metropolitan Museum’s ‘Chroma’ suggests that the cradle of western civilisation was in thrall to colour and glitter
Washington exhibitions offer dystopian landscapes, a mysterious model and an exhaustive double feature
Artists such as Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg flourished in the city at a moment of pivotal change
Modernists hated bibelots but this New York show makes a strong case for the love of unnecessary decoration
An aquatic theme binds the spiritual, practical and aesthetic together in the Native American galleries
He remade classic works of art with black figures but hid his own race for 40 years
A retrospective at New York’s International Center of Photography traces six decades of the American’s career
Three thousand pictures, discovered long after his death, shed light on the artist’s intriguing strangeness
Energy and delight shine brightly in a New York retrospective that takes in dictatorship, indigenous rights, love and war
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