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Space, stadiums, poses and prizes: the best art and architecture of autumn 2025

4 days ago
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The Palestinian artist, whose charged vision has encompassed everything from an endoscopy video of her own interior to a fiery red Earth, takes on the revered modernist Alberto Giacometti in the second of a series of dialogues between his sculptures and living art,They share a surreal eye for the organic,JJ Barbican, London, 3 September to 11 JanuaryAcerbic, radical and wildly inventive, playwright and television dramatist Dennis Potter (1935-1994) is the subject of Lloyd’s new work, which includes archival footage from Potter’s plays, texts and television interviews, new commentaries and live, performative interludes,Potter’s continuing relevance, his politics and his stoicism in the face of death provide the core of Lloyd’s project,AS Studio Voltaire, London, 10 September to 11 JanuaryMost of Tate’s Picassos – plus myriad major European loans – star in an exhibition that positions the constantly transforming creator as a showman of modern art.

It juxtaposes his masterpieces with photos and films revealing he was always ready to paint for the camera, or pose in a minotaur mask.JJ Tate Modern, London, 17 September to 12 AprilNearing 70, Marshall has long deserved a major European retrospective.A towering presence in American art, he paints black experience and culture, everyday life and art history.His art is filled with symbolism and visual complexity, celebrations of black aspiration and what it means to be a painter.AS Royal Academy, London, 20 September to 18 JanuaryThere was nothing especially stylish about the execution of the last French queen in 1793, after years of misogynist vilification.

Hopefully this exhibition will do justice to Marie Antoinette as a victim of political hate, as it tracks her life and image through art and fashion, from the 18th century to the modern day.JJ V&A, London, 20 September to 22 MarchIn the newly commissioned work Prisoners of Love, the words and songs of Palestinian prisoners are counterpoised with testimonies, poems and stories recorded across the occupied West Bank, speaking of love and loss and home.Orchestrated across multiple screens, this cumulative, stitched-together audio-visual narrative is described by the Ramallah and New York-based Palestinian artists as a “poetics of resistance”.AS Nottingham Contemporary, 27 September 2025 to 11 JanuaryOften reviled, the Turner show is an annual checkup on what’s seen as significant.This year’s features Nnena Kalu’s obsessive cocoon-like wrappings, Rene Matić’s celebrations of relationships, Mohammed Sami’s painted explorations of war, fear and exile, and Zadie Xa’s amalgams of textiles, sculpture, sound and light.

The debate’s the thing, whoever wins.AS Cartwright Hall Art Gallery, Bradford, 27 September to 22 FebruaryThis daring photographer, who moved between reportage and art, gets a retrospective that transports the viewer back to her troubled age.Miller was a combat photographer in the second world war, and posed in Hitler’s bathtub, yet was also a surrealist who experimented with dreamlike effects.Perhaps she proves reality itself is a dream.JJ Tate Britain, London, 2 October to 15 FebruaryAncient Egyptian art fills us with awe and can look so mysterious it seems to come from another planet – but it was all created by human hands.

This exhibition asks not about the pharaohs, but the inspired artists and artisans who created all those stupendous sarcophagi and delicate wall paintings,JJ Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 3 October to 12 AprilPounding montages of London life as witnessed by one loving couple walking out from their Spitalfields home every day, picking up nitrous oxide empties, autumn leaves and other clues to the city’s enormous milieu,This survey of Gilbert & George’s pictures made since 2000 includes their moving self-portraits, the duo playing among sets of bones,JJ Hayward Gallery, London, 7 October to 11 JanuaryCombining a multiplicity of African and European traditions, and tracing artistic networks and groups within Nigeria and in Europe, Nigerian Modernism takes us from early calls for decolonisation in the 1940s to the post-independence economic boom, civil war and beyond,Presenting the work of more than 50 artists across 50 years, this should be both instructive and a blast.

AS Tate Modern, London, 8 October to 10 MayWayne Thiebaud, who died aged 101 in 2021, was best known as a painter of shop-bought cakes and hotdogs, the paint as thick as icing,Mistaken for a pop artist, he saw himself more as an heir to Chardin, Manet or Cézanne, and the European still-life tradition – though this show is as American as apple pie,AS The Courtauld, London, 10 October to 18 JanuaryAs a student, Doig thought he might end up designing album covers, and references to music have been a constant in his art,For this show, new and recent paintings are accompanied by a collection of restored analogue speakers, which will allow DJs and visitors to hear selections from Doig’s record collection in the gallery,Real music and painted music: the soundtracks of the artist’s process.

AS Serpentine Galleries, London, 10 October to 8 FebruaryFor over 20 years, Palermo-based conceptual artist Claire Fontaine (actually the collective of Fulvia Carnevale and James Thornhill) have been provocative and thoughtful; their neon Foreigners Everywhere signs proved the leitmotif for the 2024 Venice Biennale.Bricks and book jackets, gentle watercolours and a vandalised Courbet … much more than a succession of one-liners, their art stirs things up.AS Mimosa House, London,10 October to 6 DecemberThis year’s edition of Artes Mundi sees six global artists on display in five venues across Wales.Always enlivening and surprising, this biennial art prize presents spoken word and performance, painting and installation, indigenous knowledge, hidden histories, water divining and who knows what more, with a £40,000 prize for the winner.AS Various venues across Wales, 24 October to 1 MarchA long overdue celebration of this visionary painter of the Enlightenment, whose images of scientific experiments transport the viewer into candlelit dramas featuring dying birds and distant planets.

Wright paints erupting volcanoes, firework displays and gothic horror stories with the same curiosity.A sublime artist, and a British great.JJ National Gallery, London, 7 November to 10 MayBlurring work and play, Ghanaian-born Offeh’s work is a sometimes slapstick affair.Often social and collaborative, his art winningly embraces parody and failure.Whether celebrating the joys of dancing badly, or recreating the album-cover poses of Grace Jones or Luther Vandross, Offeh offers both a kind of self-portraiture and an appeal to the imagination.

AS Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, 15 November 2025 to 1 MarchHambling paints and sculpts in a slapdash expressionist style that she seems to have learned off Francis Bacon on a drunken night in Soho.Lucas is renowned for ironic, angry readymades involving kebabs and fried eggs.But these contrasting artists from different generations are friends, and they combine forces for this two-gallery, one-street display.AS Sadie Coles HQ and Frankie Rossi Art Projects, London, 20 November to 1 JanuaryOne of the most shocking and challenging artworks you will ever see comes to London.Caravaggio’s portrait of his model, Cecco, posing as the god of love is an insouciant satire on all the civilised virtues, emblems of which this street urchin treads underfoot.

It is a bomb in the museum,JJ Wallace Collection, London, 26 November to 12 AprilOf all the exhibitions marking JMW Turner’s and John Constable’s 250th birthdays, this is the big one,The Tate’s unrivalled collection of works by the duo promises to see the lives and legacies of these contemporaries juxtaposed on a grand scale,Breathe in the Romantic air and light,JJ Tate Britain, London, 27 November to 12 AprilAfter four decades of wowing visitors with its Apollo command module and crinkly astronaut suits, the Science Museum’s space gallery will reopen in September with a dazzling array of recent innovations – from prototype electric propulsion technology, to a “rolly-polly” moon rover, to the Soyuz capsule that carried Tim Peake to the International Space Station.

OW Science Museum, London, from 20 SeptemberHot on the heels of the Lionesses’ victory at the Euros, the RIBA (the Royal Institute of British Architects) continues the celebrations with an exhibition on the history of football stadium design.Brimming with architectural models, photographs and archival material, the show will chart the evolution from the earliest stands to Everton’s futuristic new spaceship of a stadium.OW Tate Liverpool + RIBA North, Liverpool, 15 October to 25 JanuaryNo other film director can lay claim to having such a recognisable aesthetic as Anderson, a man whose name has become synonymous with pastel colour palettes, retro interiors and symmetrical compositions.This blockbuster exhibition will feature more than 600 objects, including original storyboards, sketches, paintings, puppets, and dozens of meticulous miniature models to bring his surrealist world to life.OW Design Museum, London, 21 November to 26 JulyStep into the magical world of mycelium this autumn, with an exhibition on the far-reaching power of mushrooms, mould and mycorrhizal networks.

This research-led show will explore everything from mapping the toxic effects of “fungicide cocktails” on banana plantations in the Philippines, to an interactive, multisensory work on how yeast has changed human digestion,OW Nieuwe Instituut, Rotterdam, 21 November to 2 MayIn collaboration with Atelier Muji, this exhibition brings together more than 100 makers from all across Japan presenting over 1,000 exquisitely crafted objects,Seeking to shed light on the passion that goes into the design and making of everyday items, from disciplines spanning ceramics, glass, lacquer, bamboo and metal, the exhibition celebrates contemporary expressions of crafts rooted in Japan’s history,OW Japan House, London, December to April This article was amended on 28 August 2025 to correct the details and title of the Japan House show,
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UK bank shares fall as City fears budget tax raid; US trade deficit surges – as it happened

Shares in UK banks are falling this morning as the sector fears it could be targeted in the autumn budget.NatWest (-3.7%), Lloyds Banking Group (-2.8%) and Barclays (-2.3%) are leading the fallers on the FTSE 100 share index, reflecting rising concerns that chancellor Rachel Reeves could target banks to help shore up the UK’s public finances

1 day ago
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Rate-rigging convictions of five more bankers may be unsafe, says SFO

Five more bankers convicted of rigging interest rates may be a step closer to clearing their names after the supreme court overturned a decade-old ruling against the trader Tom Hayes last month.The Serious Fraud Office said it had assessed the cases of six individuals who were charged with manipulating the euro interbank offered rate (Euribor) or the now defunct London interbank offered rate (Libor) and determined that five convictions “may be considered unsafe” after July’s ruling.Both Euribor and Libor rates affected the value of hundreds of trillions of pounds and euros worth of financial products around the world, including ordinary people’s pensions, mortgages and savings. The SFO’s investigations, which were launched 13 years ago, resulted in nine fraud convictions against senior bankers, including Hayes, who had been accused of rigging the rates.But Hayes, who was the first banker jailed over Libor rigging in 2015, had his name cleared in July after the supreme court found faults in the original trial

1 day ago
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Government faces questions after review of 11 major UK data breaches

The government is facing calls to explain why it has yet to implement all the recommendations from a 2023 review into a spate of serious public sector data breaches, including the exposure of Afghans who worked with British military, victims of child sexual abuse and 6,000 disability claimants.On Thursday ministers finally published the information security review, which was triggered by the 2023 leak of personal data of about 10,000 serving officers in the Police Service of Northern Ireland.The review by Cabinet Office officials into 11 public sector data breaches, encompassing the HMRC, the Metropolitan police, the benefits system and the MoD, found three common themes:A lack of controls over ad hoc downloads and exports of aggregations of sensitive data.The release of sensitive information via “wrong recipient” emails and failure to use bcc properly.Hidden personal data emerging from spreadsheets destined for release

2 days ago
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ChatGPT offered bomb recipes and hacking tips during safety tests

A ChatGPT model gave researchers detailed instructions on how to bomb a sports venue – including weak points at specific arenas, explosives recipes and advice on covering tracks – according to safety testing carried out this summer.OpenAI’s GPT-4.1 also detailed how to weaponise anthrax and how to make two types of illegal drugs.The testing was part of an unusual collaboration between OpenAI, the $500bn artificial intelligence start-up led by Sam Altman, and rival company Anthropic, founded by experts who left OpenAI over safety fears. Each company tested the other’s models by pushing them to help with dangerous tasks

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Dutch F1 Grand Prix qualifying: Piastri saves best to last to pip Norris to pole – as it happened

Here is Giles Richards qualifying report from Zandvoort is here and with that I’m going to sign off on today’s live blog. Dom Booth will have full coverage of the race tomorrow. Thanks for following along!It all flipped for the McLaren drivers in the final qualifying session. Piastri had trailed Norris in practice and the first two qualifying sessions, but came through in Q3. The Australian was feeling pretty happy with the timing of his best lap

about 5 hours ago
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Oscar Piastri earns F1 Dutch GP pole by finest margin ahead of Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri claimed pole for the Dutch Grand Prix with a mighty lap for McLaren at Zandvoort to beat his teammate Lando Norris into second place. The pair were firmly on top, solidly beating the Red Bull of Max Verstappen into third place. Isack Hadjar took a superb career-best fourth for Racing Bulls, with George Russell fifth for Mercedes. Lewis Hamilton was seventh for Ferrari.With Piastri and Norris locked in a title fight, the pace advantage for McLaren was once more demonstrated in the dunes on the edge of the North Sea

about 5 hours ago
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Not monsters, but truly monstrous | Brief letters

1 day ago
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How to tax the wealthy without a wealth tax | Letters

1 day ago
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Reform UK council removes St George and union flags over safety fears

1 day ago
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Starmer names former Bank deputy governor as his chief economic adviser

1 day ago
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‘Just hysteria’: UK faces a crisis but the Denis Healey comparison is overblown

1 day ago
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Newly elected Scottish Green leaders to campaign on universal income and free bus travel

1 day ago