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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Jonathan Jones

Neon wonders, sex scandals and the horror of modernism – the week in art

Douglas Gordon’s neon artwork i second that emotion, 2022.
Glow and tell … Douglas Gordon’s neon artwork i second that emotion, 2022. Photograph: Lucy Dawkins/Studio lost but found/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, Germany

Exhibition of the week

Douglas Gordon
The dark imagination behind 24 Hour Psycho sees the light with a show that celebrates neon.
Gagosian Davies Street, London, until 14 January.

Also showing

Sin
Tracey Emin, Lucas Cranach the Elder and Rembrandt all depict sex and scandal in this entertaining show on tour from the National Gallery in London.
York Art Gallery until 22 January.

Tzu Nyen Ho’s The Cloud of Unknowing
From Tzu Nyen Ho’s The Cloud of Unknowing in Horror in the Modernist Block at the Ikon. Photograph: Courtesy of the Artist and Edouard Malingue Gallery

Horror in the Modernist Block
Artists including Shezad Dawood, Ola Hassanain and Richard Hughes explore the sinister crannies of modernist architecture.
Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, until 1 May.

At The Colour of Anxiety: Race, Sexuality and Disorder in Victorian Sculpture in Leeds.
At The Colour of Anxiety: Race, Sexuality and Disorder in Victorian Sculpture in Leeds. Photograph: Rob Harris

The Colour of Anxiety
Racial fears and imperial tensions uncovered in Victorian sculpture.
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, until 26 February.

British Art Show
Michael Armitage, Joanna Piotrowska, Tai Shani and many others in a sprawling survey of the new.
The Box, Plymouth, until 8 January.

Image of the week

Painting of Cher and a Werewolf at a Buffet in Las Vegas: AI artwork created by Lindsey Mendick.
Painting of Cher and a Werewolf at a Buffet in Las Vegas: AI artwork created by Lindsey Mendick. Photograph: Lindsey Mendick

We asked top artists to embrace AI – with creepy results. A new generation of software is creating strong images, challenging notions of human artistry. One of our testers, the 2012 Turner prize winner Elizabeth Price, said: “I quickly became fascinated by how it was putting images together; how that process differed from the human mind.” See what Mat Collishaw, Gilbert and George, Gillian Wearing and more made of the experiment in our feature.

What we learned

Indonesian collective ruangrupa topped the latest art power list – despite an antisemitism row

Queerness is out front at Art Basel Miami

The regeneration of Thamesmead’s brutalist utopia was botched

Criticism is mounting of Berlin’s “climate-killer” museum

Tarot cards are revealing Leonora Carrington’s surreal genius

Ukraine’s artists are taking on Putin’s Russia

The co-designer of the National Gallery’s Sainsbury wing has waded into the row over its revamp

A battle has erupted over the Museum of London’s about-to-close main site

Sydney Modern is a new cultural superstar

Bondi bared all for Spencer Tunick

Prix Pictet has released a new book of mind-bending female photography

A rare self-portrait by Max Beckmann broke auction records for German art

Masterpiece of the week

Relief plaque made of brass cast using the cire perdue (lost wax) technique.
Relief plaque made of brass cast using the cire perdue (lost wax) technique. Photograph: The Trustees of the British Museum

The Oba sacrificing leopards, from Benin City, c1500s-1600s
This masterpiece of Benin art pulses with character, life and power. It’s one of many brass and bronze reliefs that once decorated the palace of the Oba, the ruler of the west African kingdom of Benin in today’s Nigeria. European accounts and depictions from the period when it was made bear witness to the magnificence of this building with its metal sculptures of soldiers, snakes and birds, all sharing this plaque’s punchy beauty. In this scene, the Oba performs an animal sacrifice that was part of the coronation ritual – apparently swinging two leopards by their tails. But it is not necessarily a realistic portrayal as he also has two fish with bulging eyes sprouting from his waist. His armoured and bejewelled body is as strong as a tree, his face peeps out of a world of metal. This is one of many extraordinary works of art looted in a British “punitive” attack on Benin in 1897.
British Museum, London

Don’t forget

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