Red Saunders, a founder member of Rock Against Racism, has recreated important moments in working class history in large scale photographs with costumed models.
Zero Dark Thirty is a much heralded and praised film. It tells the story of how the CIA hunted down Osama Bin Laden. It is appalling.
The title of this multimedia exhibition is a quote from a Yemeni poet.
Woody Sez, the life and music of Woody Guthrie This lively musical biography weaves together Guthrie’s life with his songs and excerpts from articles he wrote for the American Communist Party newspaper The People’s World.
A powerful new film, The Happy Lands, recreates the General Strike of 1926 with non‑professional actors and relatives of the strikers, says Greg Jones
The battered cassette recorder on top of the fridge and yellow Tupperware help to place new play God's Property in a Deptford council house in 1982.
Iraq: Photographs by Sean Smith | From Mary Wollstonecraft to Margaret Thatcher | Labour in film
The work of Roy Lichtenstein represents, for many people, the epitome of American Pop Art.
From the opening credits of Mayday you could think you have sat down to watch the cosy country crime of Midsomer Murders.
Edith Tudor-Hart—In the Shadow of Tyranny | Invisible Romans | McCullin
According to Phil Vasili, Walter Tull is "largely absent from recorded history".
New versions of three of Brecht’s most famous works—Mother Courage, Life of Galileo and The Threepenny Opera—will be performed in London, Salford and Stratford during February and March.