Routes to Revolution showcases the creative responses of a group of refugee and newly arrived women towards Birmingham’s industrial and craft-based heritage.
Past Pixels have joined forces with the National Union of Mineworkers to produce a selection of 18 greetings cards of the enamal badges of the NUM during the 1984-5 strike.
The hugely popular Paul Gauguin exhibition at London’s Tate Modern is the first major display of his paintings in Britain for 50 years.
"Nobody’s yet written a play which features the way I am feeling. I feel outrage, fury and massive anger. The overpaying of the financial elite has corrupted our whole society.
The People Speak promises to be an inspiring antidote to sanitised and top-down histories of Britain.
Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins is the final novel in the Hunger Games trilogy, aimed at 13 to 15 year olds. It sees a rebellion against the dictatorial Capitol.
This event unites documentary makers from around the world to celebrate documentary making.
The new BBC Three drama series Lip Service, billed as dealing with the "real lives of lesbians", grabbed my attention immediately.
Bob Dylan’s impact on popular songwriting was immediate and enduring, and this is particularly true of at least one black American singer-songwriter.
The Arbor is the powerful true story of Bradford playwright Andrea Dunbar (best known for Rita, Sue and Bob Too) and her daughter Lorraine.
Walid Raad says his work "was in some ways made possible by the wars in Lebanon". He playfully considers the effects of conflict not only on body and mind, but also on art itself. Miraculous Beginnings is the first survey of his work from the past twenty years.
This is an exhibition by four contemporary artists—Sally Carson, Marion Tasker, Angela Stapleford and Andy Ridley (the last two have both contributed to Socialist Worker).