TogetherAn exhibition of photographs by Angela Stapleford taken at recent Love Music Hate Racism events. On display outside Logan Hall and Jeffrey Hall.
I admire Bob Geldof but the fact that he has chosen to run this event with virtually no African artists is bewildering. Each artist has only got 15 minutes, so it’s not like anyone is going to be on stage for very long.
Depth of FieldOpen Eye Gallery, LiverpoolUntil 30 JulyPhone 0151 709 9460
It came as an insult when the Live8 organisers forgot to put any African artists in their line-up in London. Many of these artists regularly fill concert venues in Britain, France and have a huge following across the African continent.
From the early to the mid-1960s, black music took a very patriotic attitude towards the war in Vietnam. A lot of that had to with the feeling that conditions for black people in the US were improving.
Jean-Paul Sartre was one of the most remarkable intellectuals of the 20th century. A new exhibition in Paris commemorates the 100th anniversary of his birth and places Sartre amid the conflicts of his age.
Goya: The DisparatesHayward Gallery touring exhibition
Fado is the passionate, volatile and haunting acoustic folk music that is as vital to Lisbon culture as the blues is to Memphis.
Sebastião Salgado exhibition Arden and Anstruther gallery, West Sussex Until 30 June
Back to Black — Art, Cinema and the Racial ImaginaryWhitechapel Gallery, east London Until 4 September