Adventures in AI, inner children unleashed and provocations from a master prankster – the week in art

6 days ago 13

Exhibition of the week

Mat Collishaw: Move37
How many artists are really “cutting edge”? Collishaw is. He catches the essence of now in this eerie experiment with AI.
Seed 130, London, until 31 May

Also showing

Niki de Saint Phalle and Yayoi Kusama: Inner Child
Two legendary, subversive artists together at last in a delirious encounter.
Opera Gallery, London, until 5 May

Maurizio Cattelan: Bones
The artist whose gold loo got heisted at Blenheim reveals his latest ironies and japes.
Gagosian Davies Street, London, from 8 April until 24 May

Mark Wallinger: Gravity is the Weakest Force in the Universe
The Turner prize winner shows new works about gravity which is, he reminds us, “the weakest force in the universe”.
Tension Fine Art, London, from 5 April until 31 May

Anne Collier
Marilyn Monroe, Sylvia Plath and Valerie Solanas are represented by relics in Collier’s photographs.
The Modern Institute, Glasgow, until 21 May

Image of the week

Arklow seawage works in Ireland
Photograph: ©Johan Dehlin

There can be few sewage facilities designed with the finesse of the new €139m (£117m) wastewater treatment plant in Arklow, which stands like a pair of minty green pagodas on the edge of the Irish Sea and whose inspiration was Sydney Opera House. Read the full article

What we learned

Pete Sedgley, key collaborator with fellow op artist Bridget Riley, has died aged 94

Artists shared grave fears over Donald Trump’s attacks on ‘anti-American art’

700-odd Post-it notes Ed Atkins drew on for his child are central to his new show

New York’s Frick Collection is set to reopen after a five-year, $220m renovation

Berlin’s Works on Skin project is selling artworks to be etched on the human body

The brilliantly odd work of Ken Kiff is being reassessed

A huge new show highlights how Paris became a haven for Black artists

The work of Vanessa Bell is emerging from the shadow of the Bloomsbury Group

Tate Modern was given a six-metre Joan Mitchell painting from a billionaire’s bedroom

Trees and humans merge in Giuseppe Penone ecstatic new show

Masterpiece of the week

Saint Sebastian by Matteo di Giovanni, probably 1480-95

Matteo di Giovanni Saint Sebastian National Gallery
Photograph: National Gallery, London

How do you survive having your body pierced by a shower of arrows? According to the medieval Golden Legend, the Roman soldier Sebastian, who had converted to Christianity, pulled through after being shot many times by pagan archers. That made him a popular symbol of endurance, resilience and, above all, recovery from plague. This painting from 15th-century Tuscany may not be massively distinguished but it is typical of images of Saint Sebastian that were placed in churches and homes to protect people. It may have been commissioned as a personal prayer or spell.

We need to remember the otherness of the past and the religious atmosphere of former centuries before leaping to what may seem, to us, the obvious interpretation that Sebastian is a gay icon. That said, even this humble painting stresses his nudity, depicted with an elegant combination of muscularity and grace, as well as his dreamy face and an arrow just above his loincloth: there is sensuality in his suffering. Homoeroticism and piety may not have have been mutually exclusive: later medieval religion sought emotional contact, and if secret desire helped unlock it – why not?
National Gallery, London

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