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Cardiff’s first modern art museum will aim to showcase Welsh talent

1 day ago
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Cardiff is to welcome its first modern art museum, a space that aims to provide a platform for contemporary local artists as well as showcase global talent in the Welsh capital.The not-for-profit privately owned Artistic Museum of Contemporary Art (Amoca) will feature about 1,000 works mostly drawn from the collection of co-founder Anders Hedlund, a Welsh-Swedish entrepreneur and philanthropist.Amoca’s founders say they are close to finalising an agreement to buy a building to permanently house the artworks in Cardiff, which is expected to open in 2026.The museum will aim to “increase public access to contemporary art, broaden the traditional museum scope and foster creative development by disrupting conventional and stereotypical narratives”, according to its mission statement.It also says it will be dedicated to minorities and subcultures, with a particular focus on platforming the work of local Welsh artists and the next generation of Welsh talent.

Amoca hopes to house a restaurant and social events space, indoor and outdoor exhibits, feature permanent and rotating collections and host a steady stream of talks, seminars, youth workshops and artist residencies,Several preview exhibitions are planned before the museum opens next year,A free pop-up titled Black Voices from the Museum Collection, featuring the work of 34 world-leading African and African diaspora artists, opened on Tuesday at the Temple of Peace in the city centre and continues until 14 June,The exhibition features work from the renowned Ghanaian artist Amoako Boafo, Cameroonian Marc Padeu, Ethiopian Tesfaye Urgessa, the Nigerian-British painter Esiri Erheriene-Essi, the Franco-Senegalese Alexandre Diop, and Marcus Jansen from New York,Also showcased is Anya Paintsil, a Welsh-Ghanian textile artist based in Glyn Ceiriog near Llangollen.

Her almost sculptural work, Nose bleeds, no back teeth and no eyebrows, draws on the figurative traditions of the artist’s Fante ancestors and employs – among other materials – wool, human hair and rubber bands to explore what she describes as “non-representative depictions of the Black figure”.“The show is about narratives, and who gets to write the narrative, so it’s an honour to be part of a group of artists of colour in this social and political environment.Historically our work has been left out and ignored by museum collections,” said Jansen, known for his surreal, twisted landscapes and deconstructions of the legacy of colonialism.Imperialist on African Colors, his piece on show at the Temple of Peace, is a huge, abstract, oil on canvas work featuring a headless and armless man on horseback.While the collection spans diverse media, styles and continents, a theme that runs through Amoca’s pieces is a focus on young, emerging artists.

“I think it’s very brave and ambitious to open a museum like this.They are obviously thinking big using a beautiful space like the Temple of Peace and looking for a permanent home,” Katherine Casals, 50, from Cardiff, said of the pop-up during a visit on its opening day.“Exhibits like this are very much needed in a capital city and I think it’s beautiful work.I hope a lot of people come to see it.”Hedlund has been based in Wales for 45 years since establishing the stationery manufacturer IG Design Group, which has a factory in Ystrad Mynach.

He founded a literary support centre for children with dyslexia in Cardiff in 2014, and says that he sees Amoca as another way to give back to local people during a public sector funding crisis.A cross-party Senedd report published in January found that despite its proud heritage, Wales lags behind its European counterparts when it comes to spending on recreational, sporting and cultural services.Last year, Arts Council of Wales warned that if funding continued to dry up, the country’s professional sector could “collapse in 10 years”, leading the Welsh government to announce an annual £4.4m top-up.“We could have opened Amoca in Stockholm but it will have so much more impact in Cardiff.

There are already several modern art museums in Sweden,” Hedlund said,“I have been collecting art for 30 years and in auction houses I see Irish collections, Scottish collections, but I’ve never seen a Welsh collection,It is time that changed and we give Welsh artists the platform and opportunities they deserve,”
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NatWest apologises to millions of customers locked out of app

NatWest has apologised to millions of customers locked out of its app in the latest IT outage to hit a major UK bank.The high street bank said it was investigating a problem caused by an update to the app that was rolled out late on Thursday, leaving customers unable to access their accounts through the app since shortly after 9am on Friday.It will be disruptive to the more than 10 million customers who use the NatWest banking app to access their account every day.The lender said its other services – including card payments, in-branch, online and telephone banking – were operating as normal.A NatWest spokesperson said: “We are aware that customers are experiencing difficulties accessing the NatWest mobile banking app

about 21 hours ago
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Hedge fund orders London-based analysts back to office five days a week

Man Group has ordered its London-based analysts to return temporarily to the office five days a week, as the world’s biggest listed hedge fund seeks to recover from a period of poor performance amid Donald Trump’s tariff war.Quantitative analysts working at Man AHL, the company’s computer-run fund that aims to identify and follow momentum in markets, have been told they are expected to be in its offices daily until the end of July as part of an “all hands on deck” project.The edict applies to about 150 staff in London, just under 10% of the overall group’s 1,700 global employees, the Financial Times reported.“Man AHL has asked its staff in London to work in the office five days a week for a three-month period to support an ‘all hands on deck’ cross-team research project,” the company said. “While these cross-team initiatives are infrequent, experience has shown that a period of highly focused, in-person collaboration allows significant research progress to be made in a relatively short amount of time

1 day ago
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UK house prices fall by more than expected amid economic uncertainty

UK house prices suffered a steeper than expected fall last month and the biggest quarterly drop in value in almost a year, as economic uncertainty continued to affect the property market.The average property price fell by 0.4% month on month in May to £296,648, a much steeper fall than the 0.1% decline City economists had expected.Figures published by Halifax on Friday showed that the cost of a typical UK property has fallen in three of the past four months, with the drop in May following a 0

1 day ago
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Sports Direct pricing practices ‘may be breaking the law’, Which? says

Sports Direct could be breaking the law by misleading shoppers into thinking they are getting a good deal, a consumer body has claimed, after it looked at prices of items ranging from trainers to hoodies.Which? said it had reported the retailer to the Competition and Markets Authority after uncovering what it claimed were “some questionable and dodgy pricing tactics” on its website.The organisation said it had found products being sold on SportsDirect.com with recommended retail prices (RRPs) “that appear to be misleading”, as its researchers could not find the products sold at that RRP price anywhere else online.It meant people may be being misled “into thinking they are getting a better deal than they really are”

1 day ago
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Bonuses banned for 10 English water bosses over sewage pollution

Bonuses for 10 water company executives in England, including the boss of Thames Water, will be banned with immediate effect over serious sewage pollution, as part of new powers brought in by the Labour government.The top executives of six water companies who have overseen the most serious pollution events will not receive performance rewards this year, the environment secretary, Steve Reed, said.The companies – Thames Water, Anglian Water, Southern Water, United Utilities, Wessex Water and Yorkshire Water – are responsible for the most serious category of sewage pollution into rivers and seas, all of which are, or have been, under criminal investigation by the Environment Agency.Under powers in Labour’s Water (Special Measures) Act 2025, the regulator, Ofwat, is now able to ban bonuses for water executives where a company fails to meet key standards on environmental and financial performance, or is convicted of a criminal offence.In the past 10 years, executives at the nine main water and sewerage companies have been paid £112m in bonuses while sewage pollution increased to a record last year of 2,487 events

1 day ago
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Wise goes to the US. Will its founder’s supercharged voting rights follow? | Nils Pratley

Back in 2021, the arrival on the London stock market of Wise, a rapidly expanding money transfer company, generated a feelgood factor at a useful moment.It came a month after overhyped Deliveroo flopped on debut. And, since Wise was a pure fintech business, as opposed to a pizza delivery outfit with an app, there was reason to think the UK might be getting its act together in the sector that politicians swoon over. Shoreditch’s finest, and its Estonian founders, would show the way in UK fintech. Wise sported a £9bn valuation

1 day ago
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Jos Buttler serves up fireworks as England see off West Indies in first T20

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French Open 2025 semi-finals: Sinner takes down Djokovic to book Alcaraz final – as it happened

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Bath’s second-half revival carries them past Bristol and into Premiership final

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Bath 34-20 Bristol: Premiership rugby union semi-final – as it happened

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Old-tech Bashir is trying something wild and brave amid the battle for Bethell | Barney Ronay

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Allegations of rape at rowing club ‘deeply concerning’ say Sport England and UK Sport

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