Culture | December 2, 2016
Review: Robert Rauschenberg
Robert Rauschenberg has catholic tastes. He’s a bubbling cauldron of ideas – one of which is a l (...Read More)
Robert Rauschenberg has catholic tastes. He’s a bubbling cauldron of ideas – one of which is a l (...Read More)
The benefit of seeing two top-tier productions of King Lear in the space of a week – first the Old (...Read More)
In a moment of irony at this exhibition of Elton John’s personal photography collection, a securit (...Read More)
Glenda Jackson has spent the last 25 years researching the intricacies of political life especially (...Read More)
In the paintings of James Ensor, life is dour and murky but death is a riot of colour and expressive (...Read More)
Ella Hickson’s hugely ambitious new play knits together a sprawling 160 year geo-political soap-op (...Read More)
Immersive theatre often promises more than it can deliver, held back not by the imagination of the p (...Read More)
You’re greeted at the entrance of the Barbican’s Curve gallery with a polite warning: “If you (...Read More)