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‘Pain is a violent lover’: Daisy Lafarge on the paintings she made when floored with agony

Daisy Lafarge was lying on the floor in excruciating pain when she started her latest paintings. A severe injury, coupled with a sudden worsening of her health, had left her unable to sit upright, while brain fog and fatigue made reading and writing impossible. So the award-winning novelist and poet fell back on her art school training, using the energy and materials she had to hand to create impressionistic paintings of her surroundings – her cat Uisce, her boyfriend’s PlayStation controller – alongside unsettling imagery of enclosed gardens and flowers decaying.“Making the paintings was a way of coexisting with pain,” says the 34-year-old. “I was on my living room floor in agony for a few hours, but I wanted to get something out of that time

1 day ago
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From Dorset to the world: wave of donations helps to secure Cerne giant’s home

It feels like a very British monument: a huge chalk figure carved into a steep Dorset hillside that for centuries has intrigued lovers of English folklore and legend. But an appeal to raise money to help protect the Cerne giant – and the wildlife that shares the landscape it towers over – has shown that its allure stretches far beyond the UK.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more

2 days ago
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‘We put a stink bomb in Stephen Fry’s shoe’: Vic and Bob on the inspired idiocy of Shooting Stars

‘Christians complained about the stuffed buzzard wearing a crucifix round its neck. Birds can’t be Christians, they said. It’s the most complaints we ever got’The first time I saw what was to become Shooting Stars was Vic Reeves – AKA Jim Moir – doing The Big Quiz during Vic Reeves Big Night Out live. I’d never seen anything like it. It was full of meaningless questions and had an attitude

3 days ago
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Sydney Biennale 2026: Hoor Al Qasimi unveils expansive program for 25th edition

The Biennale of Sydney has revealed the final lineup details for its 25th edition, scheduled to open mid-March across five key venues, including White Bay Power Station, the Art Gallery of New South Wales and Penrith Regional Gallery.Featuring 83 artists, collaborations and collectives from 37 countries including Australia, the 25th Biennale of Sydney is titled “Rememory” – after the term coined by author Toni Morrison – and will “[explore] the intersection of memory and history as a means of revisiting, reconstructing, and reclaiming histories”.It represents the vision of artistic director Hoor Al Qasimi, the first Arab appointed to the role and the eighth woman in the festival’s 53-year history.Highlights announced on Tuesday include a giant functioning clay oven at White Bay Power Station in Rozelle, created by Argentinian sculptor Gabriel Chaile, which will be activated for the Biennale’s opening weekend and at key moments through the festival to serve visitors Peruvian cuisine. Also for food lovers is a large vat of tabbouleh, created by Lebanese artist Mounira Al Solh as part of a community-based performance in Granville

3 days ago
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Meryl Streep is as withering as ever in first full-length trailer for Devil Wears Prada 2

The first full-length trailer for The Devil Wears Prada 2 has been released, and given more details on David Frankel’s hotly anticipated follow-up. In the promo, Meryl Streep’s Miranda Priestly and her right-hand man Nigel, played by Stanley Tucci, are seen reuniting with Anne Hathaway’s Andy and, later, Emily Blunt’s Emily.Priestly remembers neither, nor even her habit of referring to all her fashion magazine assistants as Emily – presumably on account of her withering alpha-editor status rather than, say, dementia.The film’s teaser trailer, which was released in November, was reportedly the most-viewed comedy trailer in 15 years, with 181.5m views on YouTube in its first 24 hours

3 days ago
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Letter: Mark Fisher obituary

In his fat 2004 volume Britain’s Best Museums and Galleries, the former arts minister Mark Fisher displayed great enthusiasm and knowledge, dating from museum visits with his father when he was very young. I greatly enjoyed working with him when he was a well-informed commissioner and I was deputy director of the Museums & Galleries Commission.We shared common ground in that I grew up in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, where he was an MP for from 1983 to 2010. Members of my family have been involved in heritage projects for many years, from museums and historic houses to oatcakes and bottle ovens, and with their advice he was able to intervene quietly and helpfully from time to time in such matters in the city.

4 days ago
societySee all
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PE funding and the true cost of obesity | Letter

about 12 hours ago
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Pentagon threatens to cut ties with Scouting America over ‘core values’

about 16 hours ago
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Three-quarters of cancer patients in England will survive by 2035, government pledges

about 22 hours ago
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Cost of UK’s drug price deal with US will come out of NHS budget

1 day ago
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Ministers to crack down on profiteering in care sector and make renewed fostering push

1 day ago
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Council and community could join up on housing | Letters

1 day ago

Ministers to crack down on profiteering in care sector and make renewed fostering push

1 day ago
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Private providers of child social care in England will be pushed out of the system if they are found to be profiteering, the children’s minister has said.Josh MacAlister, who is in charge of overhauling the care system for children, also called for a fostering equivalent of the Homes for Ukraine scheme to provide homes for tens of thousands of children.Announcing a major push to find homes for 10,000 foster children as part of a bid to rebalance child social care away from private providers, MacAlister said the state was “failing to provide the lifelong, loving relationships that these kids need”.MacAlister led an independent review of child social care under the last Tory government before becoming an MP and then minister.He said his message to private providers was: “If you want to be part of this system in the future, don’t price-gouge; don’t profiteer.

”He added: “There might be some [private] providers in that mix who are on board and those that aren’t will be pushed out of the system.”Ministers are carrying out an urgent review of the financial security of private providers of child social care, and are homing in on profit-gouging in the sector – warning they will implement a profit cap if profiteering is identified at private providers.An oversight mechanism that will be in place within months would reduce the risk of a repeat of the Southern Cross scandal, which saw the collapse of a major private equity backed UK care home provider in 2011 after a rapid and unsustainable expansion, MacAlister said.Landmark legislation to eliminate private profit from children’s social care services in Wales come into force in April last year, while in Scotland the government is trying to limit for-profit operators.But in England, more than 80% of child residential homes are for profit.

In 2022, the Competition and Markets Authority found that children’s home owners in England, Scotland and Wales were making excessive profits while carrying too much debt – exposing children and councils to unacceptable risks.Taxpayer spending on residential care has doubled in England since 2020, with residential care costs reaching £3.1 billion in 2023-24, meaning each children’s home place costs more than £300,000 a year.Roxy Wilson, a contestant on this year’s BBC programme The Traitors, and who has experienced foster care, said: “People think they will not get support, but they will.Fostering can fundamentally change a child’s path, and you don’t have to be perfect or rich – you just need to have the room in your heart.

”Wilson said she had seen first-hand the difference a stable home could make after experiencing foster care for the early part of her life before she was adopted by Judy Wilson, who also featured on the show.A new national system will seek to halt an exodus of foster carers, which has seen the number of people approved for foster care fall by almost 12% over the past decade, with the drop sharper since the Covid pandemic.The government’s £88m fostering plan will also include £25m to help potential fosterers update or extend their homes to accommodate more children, and will see a rollout of pilots that could see potential fosterers help out part-time.New regional fostering hubs will give stronger guidance about who is suitable, challenging “outdated” ideas that they need to be married, homeowners or not work full-time, and help local areas collaborate on recruitment and giving support to local parents.MacAlister said the recruitment push was a “call to arms” and compared the drive to the Homes for Ukraine scheme, which saw more than 100,000 people offering a place in their homes to Ukrainian refugees in its first 24 hours.

“The public is ready, they want to play their role in this.We just need to change the system so that they can step forward and do their bit,” MacAlister said.Sarah Thomas, the chief executive of The Fostering Network, said the government’s pledge to find foster families for 10,000 more children by 2029 was a welcome step forward, but it needed to focus more on retaining foster carers and increasing pay as some were caring at poverty levels.“Retaining foster carers is just as crucial as recruiting them, which is why the lack of equal emphasis on retention and financial support is so disappointing,” she said.This article was amended on 4 February 2025.

The government plan involves finding homes for 10,000 foster children, rather than recruiting 10,000 foster carers as stated in an earlier version.