Jake and Dinos Chapman
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From Bosch to Dante to Sartre, and from Hell’s Angels to Hell’s Kitchen to Hellraiser, visions of the infernal location and condition still resonate
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One of the most enduring partnerships of the YBA movement is over. Yet their gleefully nasty, provocative aesthetic lives on in the first solo show by the ‘Colonel Kurtz of the Cotswolds’
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As the vast Giant gallery opens in a former department store, the English seaside town is hoping to rival Margate, Hastings …and even Santa Monica
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Works by the enfants terribles of Britart form part of Spanish exhibition exploring enduring influence of Francisco de Goya
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The ten best things to do this weekThe 10 best things to do this week: Woyzeck and My Cousin RachelIt’s the last two weeks to catch John Boyega’s on the stage as a soldier in 80s Berlin, while Rachel Weisz stars in a seductive, gothic thriller
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Art by Antony Gormley, Jenny Saville and Paula Rego, who used debris from fire, is auctioned for Glasgow School of Art
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What was Ai Weiwei thinking? Posing as a dead refugee boy on a beach in Lesbos was risible, fatuous and grotesque
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Art is being smothered by good intentions – and it’s becoming a bland, pious porridge. Let’s reinject the rebellion, please
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When he was 16, Josh C Wright went on a mission to photograph all of Britain’s art stars in their studios – and they welcomed him with open arms. Here’s the best of his series A Portrait of the Artist by a Young ManGallery
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A new exhibition at the Shapero Modern gallery called Rack ‘em up: British Contemporary Editions, 1990-2000 gathers works by all the leading members of the generation known as the YBAs, including Damien Hirst, Sam Taylor-Johnson, Sarah Lucas, Tracey Emin, Jake and Dinos Chapman. The exhibition includes these candid photographs of the young artists at rest and play by Johnnie Shand Kydd.Gallery
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One half of the Turner-nominated brothers is filming a typically provocative work featuring Rhys Ifans and Sophie Kennedy Clark, out this summer
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Forget Christmas cards and stamps. This year, share original works by the world’s top artists. First up it’s the Chapman brothers – because nothing says season’s greetings like the Ku Klux Klan and mutant children flashing before your eyes
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Jonathan Jones: Diabolically grotesque art – from Jonathan Payne’s sprouting finger sculptures right back to Hieronymus Bosch – has staying power. As long as we have bodies, we will experience body horror
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Age of Terror: Art Since 9/11 review – a chilling show for dark times
2 out of 5 stars.