Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Kyotographie / Kawada Kikuji x Iwane Ai review – staggering images of the aftermath of shattering violence


Kawada Kikuji’s Invisible, from the series Los Caprichos.Photograph: © Kikuji Kawada, Courtesy PGI


Kyotographie: Kawada Kikuji x Iwane Ai review – staggering images of the aftermath of shattering violence

Japan House, London
This darkly atmospheric exhibition pairs the revolutionary Hiroshima images of revered photographer Kikuji with Ai’s glittering but deeply melancholy visions of cherry blossom

May it still be a beautiful life


Shintaro Miyake, 記憶 Memories (detail), 2026. Courtesy of Tomio Koyama Gallery
Shintaro Miyake, 記憶 Memories (detail), 2026. Courtesy of Tomio Koyama Gallery

May it still be a beautiful life

27 Jun — 1 Aug 2026 at the Tomio Koyama Gallery in Tokyo, Japan

22 JUNE 2026 

Every time I see or hear about the many things happening in the world, I find myself thinking more and more that we’ve reached the end of days. This is hardly anything new, as there has always been something or another, ever since I was a child. I don’t remember when I first learned the phrase Yo-mo-sue (the end of days)1, but lately, as I’ve gained the impression that we’ve already reached it, day after day, I cannot help but feel as if there’s actually an even further end beyond that.

Imamura Shiko / A revolutionary innovator

 

Imamura Shiko, Gokarei (Bird repelling bell) (detail). Courtesy of Yokohama Museum of Art
Imamura Shiko, Gokarei (Bird repelling bell) (detail). Courtesy of Yokohama Museum of Art


Imamura Shiko: a revolutionary innovator (...)

25 Apr — 28 Jun 2026 at the Yokohama Museum of Art in Kanagawa, Japan

15 MAY 2026

The painter Imamura Shiko (1880–1916) was active from the late Meiji era (1868–1912) through the early Taisho era (1912–1926). This is the first large-scale retrospective of his work in 42 years, and the first ever to be held at a public art museum. Shiko studied traditional Yamato-e, a Japanese painting style established during the Heian era (794–1185) and practiced continuously since, and at a young age demonstrated exceptional skill in history painting. 

Ron Mueck's exhibition


Ron Mueck, exhibition view. Courtesy of Mori Art Museum
Ron Mueck, exhibition view. Courtesy of Mori Art Museum


Ron Mueck's exhibition 

29 Apr — 23 Sep 2026 at the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo, Japan

15 MAY 2026


The Mori Art Museum and the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain are pleased to present the exhibition Ron Mueck (Wednesday, April 9, to Wednesday, September 23, 2026).

Picasso’s Le Rêve (The Dream) / Erotic and primal



Anatomy of an artwork

Picasso’s Le Rêve (The Dream): erotic and primal

This article is more than 8 years oldThe painter’s mistress, Marie-Thérèse Walter, was is his muse in this libidinous portrait of sexual desire and expressionSkye Sherwin
Skye Sherwin
9 march 2018

The painter’s mistress, Marie-Thérèse Walter, was is his muse in this libidinous portrait of sexual desire and expression

Monday, June 22, 2026

The Daughters of the Moon by Italo Calvino

 


Italo Calvino


The Daughters of the Moon

by Italo Calvino

Deprived, as it was, of a covering of air to act as a protective shield, the moon found itself exposed right from the start to a continual bombardment of meteorites and to the corrosive action of the sun’s rays. According to Thomas Gold, of Cornell University, the rocks on the moon’s surface were reduced to powder through constant attrition from meteorite particles. According to Gerard Kuiper, of the University of Chicago, the escape of gases from the moon’s magma may have given the satellite a light, porous consistency, like that of a pumice stone.

The greatest ever portrait of Frank Sinatra was missing one thing

Frank Sinatra, 1964


The greatest ever 

portrait of Frank Sinatra 

was missing one thing 

— Frank Sinatra

‘Frank Sinatra Has A Cold’ was published in 1966 and instantly enshrined in journalism’s hall of fame. But the cat-and-mouse tale of how Gay Talese made Ol’ Blue Eyes sing from a distance is just as astonishing

In November of 1965, the journalistic fates brought Gay Talese and Frank Sinatra together in Beverly Hills and Las Vegas, Manhattan and Hollywood. Well, sort of. They were two guys from New Jersey, both of them Italian-American, given to continental tailoring, unstoppable ambition and unrelenting perfectionism in their chosen crafts.

Collapse review – coming to terms with a brother’s death


HOMBRE FANTÁSTICO - Édouard Louis, FM25, 2017. Fotografía de Laurence Ellis.

Review

Collapse review – coming to terms with a brother’s death

In the latest autofictional instalment of his family saga, the French writer makes sense of his sibling’s violent homophobia and short 


Charles Arrowsmith
Wed 17 Jun 2026


At 33, the French writer Édouard Louis has already seen all seven of his slim novels translated into English. In his breakout debut, The End of Eddy(2017), and again in Change (2024), he wrote about being the promising child of a poor family, the bullied gay son who became a bestselling author. Several of his other books have offered sympathetic sociological portraits of his parents: a father destroyed by physical labour, a victim of French healthcare and housing subsidy cutbacks, and a mother who, after raising numerous children in poverty, fled first Louis’s father and then, in Monique Escapes, published earlier this year, his abusive successor. Now, in Collapse, translated by novelist Tash Aw, Louis describes his eldest brother’s death, at 38, from complications relating to alcoholism.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

70 brilliant books for the summer

 

A person sits reading by a pond, with another person visible in the background among lush green trees

From dynamite debuts to must-read memoirs and magical children’s fiction, here’s our selection of this year’s hottest holiday reads

70 brilliant books for the summer


Leading authors Mark Haddon, Samantha Harvey, Zadie Smith select their favourites

Sat 13 Jun 2026


Fiction

Transcription

Ben Lerner

A middle-aged writer returns to his college townto record the final interview with his 90-year-old intellectual mentor. But he’s broken his phone, and doesn’t seem able to confess that it’s not recording … this anxiety dream of a beginning leads us into a series of sharp insights into family, memory, inheritance and storytelling – all that it means to be human, and how smartphones are changing our sense of the world at every level.

What to read this summer by Mark Haddon, Samantha Harvey, Zadie Smith and more


What to read this summer by Mark Haddon, Samantha Harvey, Zadie Smith and more

Leading authors including Sarah Waters, William Dalrymple, Bernardine Evaristo and Anne Enright reveal their perfect holiday reading


, William Boyd, , Anne Enright, Virginia Evans, Bernardine Evaristo, Stephen Grosz, , Luke Kennard, , and 
Sat 13 Jun 2026 09.00 BST

Zadie Smith
Margaret Busby’s Part of the Story: Writings from Half a Century is the record of one woman’s lifelong passion for the literature and life of Africa and its diaspora, wherever she finds it. A beautiful collection. The funniest and smartest novel I’ve read in a while is Black Bag by Luke Kennard.