Dorothea Lange’s images are about more than just the 1930s in the US, and another exhibition looks at how photos are used
In the Fade is a film filled with raw emotion. It gives a sensitive and realistic portrayal of Islamophobia and its consequences for the main character, Katja.
A new release about the life of Oscar Wilde is testament to his wit and an attack on the callousness of the British ruling class, writes?Alistair Farrow
Frida Kahlo’s carefully constructed private, public and professional identity is thoroughly unpicked in a new exhibition, Making Her Self Up.
Brian Friel’s play Translations is set in Ireland in 1833 as a new phase of intensified British rule is beginning.
Yorkshire Sculpture Park’s latest offerings are a poignant reminder of how we’re alienated from the natural world, says?Esther Neslen
Until now this brilliant New York band’s most well-known song was called, “Stoned and starving”.
Victoria Crowe’s portraits strongly reflect the emotional and intellectual relationship that she formed with her subjects.
A new musical collaboration between a west London theatre and the English National Opera sticks two fingers up to the Nazis, says Jasmine Fischer
It’s an iconic image. Winford Fagan in Handsworth, Birmingham, 1970.
A new film about Jean-Luc Godard and 1968 would be better if it focused a little more on the latter and a little less on the former, says?Bethan Turner