Watch us inside riotsBlue cars and light firesWe already been knocked ScrutinizedPlus cops rush to brutalise usAmerica’s polluted by lust
The Tate’s new exhibition The Lure of the East shows how British painters sought to represent the Near and Middle East from the seventeenth to the early twentieth centuries.
Harry Benson is a Glasgow-born international photographer. This exhibition brings many images from his 60 year career back to his home town.
Curated by Turner‑prize winning artist Grayson Perry, this exhibition features paintings, sculptures and photographs from among the Arts Council’s 8,000 piece collection.
This collection of photographs was produced by young people who participated in workshops with photographer Adrian Wood and a team of volunteers.
Four very good films have recently been released on DVD.
"If I make one person think about the issues unfolding on the other side of the world, I will have achieved something," says writer Satinder Kaur Chohan of her new play Zameen (meaning "land").
This book is about a period that, for so many of us who were involved, was one of the most memorable and extraordinary of our lives.
Anyone who can get to the Hayward Gallery on London’s South Bank should visit the 40th anniversary exhibition of the posters and photos of the Atelier Populaire (Popular Workshop) from the May 1968 uprising in France.
This famous photo from the Miners’ Strike of 1984-85 is one of many images on show at the Don McPhee: Photographer exhibition at the Guardian’s Newsroom visitor centre. McPhee died last year and the Guardian is celebrating the life and work of one of its great news photographers. The exhibition runs until 27 June at 60 Farringdon Road, London EC1, and admission is free of charge
Edinburgh-based singer-songwriter David Ferrard’s first album Broken Sky is winning rave reviews from the music press.
The first thing that strikes you when listening to David Ferrard is the beauty of his voice—clear and strong, tough and sweet all at the same time.