arts and design

Van Gogh reflects, Bacon feels beastly and a ‘lost’ masterpiece is restored – the week in art

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Exhibition of the week

Van Gogh: Self-Portraits
Harrowing and intimate encounters with a man who saw right through himself.
Courtauld Gallery, London, from 3 February to 8 May.

Also showing

Mike Nelson
A claustrophobic installation by an artist whose gothic imagination can claw at you.
Matt’s Gallery, London, from 3 February to 5 March.

Francis Bacon: Man and Beast
Humans and other animals in some of the most uneasy masterpieces of modern art.
Royal Academy, London, from 29 January to 17 April.

Francis Bacon: Man and Beast.
Francis Bacon: Man and Beast. Photograph: David Parry/Royal Academy of Arts

The Tudors
Britain’s most impressive royal dynasty glare on from their portraits.
Holburne Museum, Bath, until 8 May.

Show Windows with the British Museum
George Shaw and Kathe Kollwitz star in an innovative public art display.
Various shop windows in Coventry until 1 May.

Image of the week

Fraud in the Garden (1930) by Yves Tanguy.
Photograph: Becca Pollak

Fraud in the Garden (1930) by Yves Tanguy
A surrealist masterpiece that was believed to have been lost or destroyed when a fascist mob raided an arthouse cinema in 1930s Paris has made a triumphant return. Fraud in the Garden, painted by Yves Tanguy, is back, with its wounds healed by a restorer’s surgery. Its rediscovery has been confirmed by Professor Jennifer Mass, an American conservation scientist, who said that the painting had been presumed “lost to history”. Read the full story here.

What we learned

There are privately owned art treasures the public has a legal right to see

Multimedia artist Noémie Goudal depicts our predicted climate future

A surgeon has tried to sell an NFT of an X-ray showing a bullet lodged in a Bataclan survivor’s arm

The Royal Academy’s Francis Bacon show made our critic want to run away

Bowie was a gent, according to photographer Anton Corbijn

What caused the fire that destroyed Glasgow School of Art ‘will never be known’

Artists are trying to tackle the dangers of rising sea levels

The Canadian painter Allison Katz creates curious illusionsand Julien Creuzet’s sculptures seem to have a life of their own

Artist and ‘death doula’ Every Ocean Hughes knows how to help the dying

Tasmanian public spaces “dripping in colonialism” have been disrupted by First Nations artists

Judy Baca, renowned Chicana muralist, paints LA’s forgotten history

Hermès is suing an American artist over NFTs inspired by its Birkin bags

Masterpiece of the week

Painting titled ‘Portrait of Gerolamo (?) Barbarigo’ by Titian
Photograph: Photo12/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Portrait of Girolamo (?) Barbarigo by Titian
His sharp eyes and even sharper nose call you from across the gallery and order you to stand in front of him. This is one of the seminal portraits in art history. Rembrandt emulated its pose in a self-portrait the National Gallery also owns. That’s because Titian discovers here how to go beyond a depiction of outward appearances, and convey the enigma of the man behind the nonchalantly leaning, silk-sleeved arm. His pose appears momentary, as if he’s about to rush off, and this adds to the sense of energy and dynamism he projects. He also seems to be sharing a joke or conversation with the painter. Although the title reflects the latest theory about his identity, he lives forever as a mystery man, at once social and secretive, communicating in his alert self-consciousness the complexity of the self. What a piece of work.
National Gallery, London.

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