Canaletto’s Eternal Venice
In Venice, there are only one or two paintings by Canaletto (1697-1768), nearly everything he produced is to be found in Britain, thanks...
Conservation vs. Modernism: The Venetian Vexation
Venice – a city which is inescapably connected to the modern world, but could never truly belong. During the nineteenth century, Venice’s...
‘The Mountains are Quiet and the Days Grow Long’: The Steady Hand of Ch’en Shu
Welcome to my second column! This week we are moving across to China to look at the life and works of the artist Ch’en Shu (1660-1736)....
Never Built New York (Metropolis Books, 2016)
Author's own photograph It is the nature of a city not to be complete. There are endless routes that city planners, architects and...
That Continuous Thing: Artists and the Ceramics Studio, 1920 – Today (Tate Publishing, 2017)
Author's own image Wet clay is a messy material. It fills the creases between your fingers. It gets under your nails. Drying on the back...
The 57th Venice Biennale: A Group Review
Past & Present: The Singapore Pavilion by Bianca Schor Zai Kuning, Dapunta Hyang: Transmission of Knowledge, 2017, at the Singapore...
Villa Necchi Campiglio: Architecture, Design & Fashion Made in Italy
Veranda, Villa Necchi Campiglio, Milano. Image courtesy of Alessandra Cianni Zambotto Every summer, Milan Arch Week casts light on the...
Architecture Week: After Grenfell
It's hard to know what to say or do after an event like the Grenfell Tower fire. In this list, we've collected some of the the most
Architecture Week: Interview with Panos Tzortzopoulos and Tom Morgan
Panos Tzortzopoulos and Tom Morgan are recent graduates of Goldsmiths’ BA Design programme. Their final project — which featured in the...
Architecture Week: Invisible Cities
How does literature provide us with new strategies of imagining our relationship with urban environments? Tom Powell discusses Italo Calvino