A walk-in wedding cake, Kiefer’s impossible task and a Bloomsbury master – the week in art

  • 6/2/2023
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Exhibition of the week Joana Vasconcelos: Wedding Cake A giant wedding cake that you can walk inside, by this visionary and surrealistic artist, should make for a truly sensational summer experience. Waddesdon Manor, Buckinghamshire, from 18 June to 26 October. Also showing Anselm Kiefer James Joyce’s impossible novel Finnegans Wake provides the inspiration for the great German artist’s new show. White Cube Bermondsey, London, from 7 June to 20 August. Beatriz Milhazes Wheels within wheels, chains of stars and kaleidoscopes of colour from the celebrated Brazilian abstract painter. Turner Contemporary, Margate, until 10 September. Stephen Tomlin This little-known sculptor of the Bloomsbury Group created busts of Virginia Woolf and others. Is he a neglected modern great? Philip Mould Gallery, London, from 5 June to 11 August. Gruppenausstellung Martin Creed and Cindy Sherman are among the artists celebrating this gallery’s Zurich origins in a summer show, Swiss style. Hauser & Wirth, Somerset, from 3 June to 1 January. Image of the week Circularity is the means, the message and the ruminative shape of Larry Achiampong’s films. The British-Ghanaian artist, born in London in 1984, is perpetually roving through time and place: the past and the present, land mass and ocean, colonial and social history. He once projected an animation on a giant screen at Piccadilly Circus that could stand as his personal avatar: a figure in a helmet and suit who might come from outer space, the boy who fell to unjust Earth. You see variations on this figure all through his new show at the Baltic in Gateshead. Read the full review. What we learned A Florida art dealer has been jailed for selling fakes of Warhol, Matisse and others Galleries are wrestling with the changing politics of art Flaming June is returning to her London home Portraits were an integral part of the marriage market in Renaissance Europe Women’s art has been crowded out of galleries and public spaces Katie Cuddon’s sculptures explore the ‘incredibly physical’ mother-baby relationship A reverend was saved from heroin and sex work by sculpting A playground of sexual fetishism came to London Hurvin Anderson brought barbershops to life The devil is everywhere in Chris Ofili’s Seven Deadly Sins Masterpiece of the week Avarice by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, 1556 Pieter Bruegel the Elder channels the fantastic world of an earlier artist, Hieronymus Bosch, in this visual romp with a moral message. Bosch died in Brabant in 1516 after establishing a reputation all over Europe for his delirious altarpieces in which demons and monsters overrun every day reality. Bruegel was born a decade or so later (the date is uncertain), in the same region of northern Europe. This drawing shows him lay claim to Bosch’s outrageous territory. The bizarre sci-fi architecture and crowds of peasants and demonic beings echo such triptychs by Bosch as The Last Judgment and Temptation of Saint Anthony. But while many artists merely imitated these works, Bruegel is learning and thinking as he forges his own original genius. British Museum, London. Don’t forget To follow us on Twitter: @GdnArtandDesign. Sign up to the Art Weekly newsletter If you don’t already receive our regular roundup of art and design news via email, please sign up here. Get in Touch If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com

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