Culture | March 9, 2018
Review: Picasso 1932: Love, Fame, Tragedy
By the age of 50, Picasso’s days as a starving artist were long behind him. His paintings sold for (...Read More)
By the age of 50, Picasso’s days as a starving artist were long behind him. His paintings sold for (...Read More)
More than any other medium, photography is used to convey ideals of beauty: air-brushed fashion mode (...Read More)
In one room a baboon screams, a mad dog runs in circles and the swollen face of a dead man looms fro (...Read More)
The film production arm of DC, publisher of super hero comics including Batman, Superman and Wonder (...Read More)
In 1977 British culture was tying itself in knots. The Queen, the very epitome of the establishment, (...Read More)
Long Day’s Journey into the Night is a punishing play. Even this stripped-back production – a me (...Read More)
Following a fairly conventional maiden production in Young Marx, the Bridge Theatre lays down a stat (...Read More)
The National’s blockbuster 2016 production of Amadeus is rewarded with a second run that’s desti (...Read More)