Culture | January 24, 2020
Review: Picasso and Paper
With Picasso and Paper, the Royal Academy confirms what we have suspected all along: the diminutive (...Read More)
With Picasso and Paper, the Royal Academy confirms what we have suspected all along: the diminutive (...Read More)
Lucy Kirkwood’s new play at the National Theatre is a revelation: hilarious, tragic, harrowing and (...Read More)
Neil Gaiman’s The Ocean at the End of the Lane is one of those novels that seems impossible to sta (...Read More)
Like many people of a certain age, I heard about A Taste of Honey through Morrissey, who had a pench (...Read More)
Since the explosion of the #MeToo movement, theatre directors have been bringing to the fore the the (...Read More)
The Immersive Wolf Of Wall Street, a theatrical event that promises to transport you into the hedoni (...Read More)
Taking place over two sittings, each more than two and a half hours long, My Brilliant Friend is epi (...Read More)
Like so many women throughout history, Dora Maar is best known for her connection to a more famous m (...Read More)