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|  | | Cheeky monkeys, gored matadors and trompe l’oeil masks – the week in art | | Alison Watt pays homage to John Soane, Ella Kruglyanskaya honours Manet, and chaos comes for civilisation – all in your weekly dispatch | |  |  Sublime … Alison Watt’s Dream, 2024, oil on canvas, showing in the exhibition of the week. Photograph: John McKenzie/Alison Watt
| |  | Jonathan Jones |
| | Exhibition of the week Alison Watt New paintings inspired by the sublime, poetic architecture of Georgian visionary Sir John Soane. • Pitzhanger Manor, London, 5 March to 15 June Also showing William S Burroughs Artworks by the beat author whose best novel, Queer, was recently released as a film. • October Gallery, London, 6 March to 5 April Ella Kruglyanskaya Sensual, haunting figurative paintings that pay homage to Manet’s depiction of a dead matador. • Thomas Dane Gallery, London, until 3 May Rhea Storr A film that documents Caribbean community groups in Wolverhampton and Sheffield. • Site Gallery, Sheffield, until 25 May Tim Stoner New abstract paintings with verve, complexity and beauty. • Pace gallery, London, 5 March to 12 April Image of the week | | |  |  Samson and Delilah by Rubens. Or possibly not. Photograph: IanDagnall Computing/Alamy
| | Forty-five years after it was bought for a then record price, doubt has been cast over the authenticity of this painting, Samson and Delilah by Peter Paul Rubens. In a new book, art historian Euphrosyne Doxiadis argues that “the flowing, twisting brushstrokes that are so characteristic of Rubens are nowhere to be seen”, and that what the National Gallery has on its wall is actually a 20th-century copy of a now lost painting by the 17th-century Flemish master. Read the full story What we learned Siena was a dazzling centre of the medieval art world Lubaina Himid will represent Britain at the 2026 Venice Biennale Leeds-based photographerPeter Mitchell had a correspondence with Nasa Crime-obsessed photographer Weegee still shocks today The arts sector may be breaking the law with its use of interns Leigh Bowery was the ultimate exhibitionist, and also Lucian Freud’s muse Women are outperforming men in Africa’s art market Photography is therapy for Martin Parr Masterpiece of the week Still Life with Fruit and Vegetables with Two Monkeys by Jan Roos, circa 1620 | | |  | | | Grapes glisten and apples shine in this depiction of a cornucopian mass of beautifully luscious fruit. It’s a still life to make you slaver, yet the luxurious assembly of refreshing edibles is being stolen by two naughty monkeys who are portrayed with the same keen eye as the fruits. One is howling its excitement to the other as it holds delicious loot in each hand. Whichever human aristocrat or merchant was planning to gorge on these treats is due to be disappointed. It is an image of entropy undermining order; chaos coming for civilisation. Such intimations of decay and ultimately of mortality are common in 17th-century still life paintings, which sometimes swarm with insects or even reptiles, not to mention the odd human skull among the luxuries. But Roos takes a novel, comic line with his acute portrayal of mischievous monkeys. • National Gallery, London 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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