A job listing: the Arts in England…always updated…always a wide view…
Working hard to keep the the liberal arts agenda alive in politically and socially fluid times. This list is updated daily. Check back regularly for the latest opportunities.
Arts Jobs from the Arts Council
https://www.artsjobs.org.uk/arts-jobs-listings/
The go-to on-line list every week…
Arts and Heritage Jobs from The Guardian.com
https://jobs.theguardian.com/jobs/arts-and-heritage/
All levels, all disciplines, all interesting…
Theatre Jobs from The Guardian.com
https://jobs.theguardian.com/jobs/theatre/
Make your presence felt…
Arts Job Finder from ArtsProfessional.co.uk
https://www.artsprofessional.co.uk/jobs
Always worth consulting…
Art and design | The Guardian Latest art and design news, comment and analysis from the Guardian
- Take me to the 125 bouncing penguins! What to see at this year Frieze art fairby Hettie Judah on October 10, 2024 at 12:55 pm
The art jamboree has hit London. Here are our highlights, from therapists for self-driving cars to sweat-guzzling go-go dancers and xoloitzcuintli dogs doused […]
- ‘You’re a girl?’ The duo taking on the male-dominated plastering worldby Catherine Hong on October 10, 2024 at 11:00 am
In the early days of Kamp Studios, Kim Collins and Amy Morgenstern were barely making rent. Now they’re a favorite of interior designers across the countryIf […]
- Too much theatre memorabilia is being lost to private collectors, says David Hareby Lanre Bakare Arts and culture correspondent on October 9, 2024 at 5:13 pm
As hundreds of personal effects belonging to playwright John Osborne go up for sale, Hare laments that the V&A is not biddingThe vital memorabilia and […]
- Use your local museums or lose them | Lettersby Guardian Staff on October 9, 2024 at 5:01 pm
Colin Montgomery offers firsthand insight into the demise of some of the institutions he used to work at in Edinburgh, and David Kennedy points out that […]
- The hidden underside of an iceberg: Laurent Ballesta’s best photographby Interview by Chris Broughton on October 9, 2024 at 2:06 pm
‘This iceberg in Antarctica was so vast, I had to dive down and take 147 photos in sub-zero water, then get a computer to join them up. Ten years on, my toes […]
- ‘What can I say? We saw the future’: artist Robert Longo on AI, Keanu and his vast mirrorball of deathby Stuart Jeffries on October 9, 2024 at 12:47 pm
Since directing Johnny Mnemonic and a making a sculpture from 40,000 bullets, the New Yorker has returned to the stunning photorealistic drawings that made him […]
- Nicola L review – feminist fun for the furry-curiousby Hettie Judah on October 9, 2024 at 12:00 pm
Camden Art Centre, LondonPop and avant garde sensibilities join forces in this playful show, full of giant limbs, wearable furniture and bare bottomsAccording […]
- ‘Like the Guggenheim!’ Inside Zurich’s staggering, revolutionary new hospital for kidsby Oliver Wainwright on October 9, 2024 at 10:21 am
From the chalet-style patient ‘cottages’ to the walls designed for scribbling on, Herzog & de Meuron’s Kinderspital is a stylish, healing, […]
- Francis Bacon: Human Presence review – ‘This whirligig of horrors is the best Bacon show I’ve ever seen’by Jonathan Jones on October 8, 2024 at 11:01 pm
National Portrait Gallery, London The hard-living artist’s distorted figures – deformed to reveal mortality, sex and death – often left their subjects […]
- Anwar Hussein obituaryby Greg Whitmore on October 8, 2024 at 5:34 pm
Photographer whose work helped to transform the public image of the royal familyThe photographer Anwar Hussein, who has died aged 85, was integral to […]
- Mire Lee’s Turbine Hall review – as kitsch as tatty Halloween decorationsby Adrian Searle on October 8, 2024 at 2:58 pm
Tate Modern, LondonThe Korean artist’s hanging sculpture of a turbine oozing brown liquid aims to frighten and disgust – but this hackneyed effort […]
- Sydney entry beaten by ‘spectacular’ Beijing building in library of the year awardby Kelly Burke on October 8, 2024 at 2:00 pm
Liverpool mayor Ned Mannoun just shrugs and smiles after his council’s ‘magnificent’ Yellamundie is outshone by $300m Beijing LibraryFollow our Australia […]
- A world in motion: Bristol photo festival 2024 – in picturesby Sarah Gilbert on October 8, 2024 at 8:00 am
The second edition of the showcase opens on 16 October with the theme ‘The World a Wave’. It features photographers from around the world investigating […]
- ‘I make architects’ dreams come true’: Hanif Kara, the magician who makes impossible buildings stay upby Oliver Wainwright on October 7, 2024 at 11:01 pm
He has had a hand in some of the 21st-century’s most daring structures – including Zaha Hadid’s Phaeno science centre. We meet the Uganda-born engineer, […]
- Haegue Yang review – a must-see show if the slats of venetian blinds make you cryby Jonathan Jones on October 7, 2024 at 11:01 pm
Hayward Gallery, London This busy retrospective of the Korean artist’s collage-heavy work uses terms like ‘displacement’ and ‘interconnectivity’ but […]
- Gap-toothed kids, creepy dolls and the first smile captured on camera – Ffoto Cymru reviewby Charlotte Jansen on October 7, 2024 at 4:39 pm
Various venues, Wales From x-rayed paintings to familial horror, the biennial photography festival showcases a stunning range of women who have pushed the […]
- Floods, protesters and remembering 7 October: photos of the day – Mondayby Matt Fidler on October 7, 2024 at 2:36 pm
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading...
- Paul Rudolph: the artful architect who inspired Foster and Rogersby Rowan Moore on October 6, 2024 at 10:00 am
The US architect designed brutalist buildings vast and small across Asia and America – including his own 27-floor Manhattan apartment. A new exhibition […]
- ‘Art may be a pact with the devil’: the great Marlene Dumas on her darkly provocative artby Adrian Searle on September 23, 2024 at 6:18 am
She pours or even tosses paint on to a canvas – to see where it takes her. The results range from myths to massacres, bound heads to Satan. In a rare […]
- Ukraine’s art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone – in picturesby Guardian Staff on July 31, 2024 at 8:00 am
After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these […]
- Ukraine’s death-defying art rescuersby Charlotte Higgins on July 30, 2024 at 4:00 am
When Putin invaded, a historian in Kyiv saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was in danger. So he set out to save as much of it as he couldIn early March […]