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Giants of Ukrainian art, Henry Moore goes to war and Chris Ofili’s myth making – the week in art

A showcase of modernist greats from Malevich to Delaunay, the Yorkshire sculptor’s Blitz drawings and Ofili’s tapestry returns home to Scotland – all in your weekly dispatch

Sharpening the Saws by Oleksandr Bohomazov, 1927.
Sharpening the Saws by Oleksandr Bohomazov, 1927. Photograph: National Art Museum of Ukraine

Exhibition of the week

In the Eye of the Storm: Modernism in Ukraine, 1900–1930s
Some of the greatest art of the early 20th century has close connections with Ukraine. This survey of its modernist achievements includes Malevich (or Malevych), El Lissitzky and more.
Royal Academy, London, from 29 June to 13 October

Also showing

Chris Ofili
Ofili’s mythological tapestry The Caged Bird’s Song comes home to the craft studios that helped him create it.
Dovecot Studios, Edinburgh, until 5 October

Stephen Farthing
Swaggering over-the-top historical-styled portraits in this London stately home that’s crammed with masterpieces.
Kenwood House, London, from 29 June to 3 November

Henry Moore
The British modernist’s powerful war art gets an outing in a show that also examines how he saw architecture.
Courtauld Gallery, London, until 22 September

Voyage
The cinema magic of Georges Méliès inspires a summer group show at the seaside base of the Maureen Paley Gallery.
Morena di Luna, Hove, from 29 June to 15 September

Image of the week

Mr Tickle by Rory McQueen.
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This self-constricted Mr Tickle by Garbage Pail Kids artist Rory McQueen is on show at Mr Men Little Miss Reimagined at Helm gallery in Brighton. He sits among four other artists’ playful reinterpretations of Roger Hargreaves’s classic children’s characters – from a Little Miss Chatterbox on her mobile phone to an X-ray of Mr Bump.

What we learned

The cover art of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone has sold for £1.5m

Tavares Strachan makes art freighted with history and peopled by the overlooked

The Yoshida family’s exquisite prints pale without historical context

Graciela Iturbide’s photographs of Mexico are bleak, haunted and utterly compelling

A new portrait of David Attenborough, now 98, is green in all senses

Henry Moore’s wartime drawings are a welcome reminder of British decency

Australian artist Guy Warren has died aged 103 after a 70-year career

Masterpiece of the week

Cavalry Attacking Infantry by Studio of Philips Wouwerman, 1656-68

Cavalry Attacking Infantry by Studio of Philips Wouwerman, 1656-68

Europe was ravaged by warfare in the 17th century, from the thirty years’ war that killed up to eight million people across central Europe to the English civil war that slaughtered as high a proportion of the British population as the first world war would. This painting, it is thought, shows a battle between Poland and Sweden who were at war from 1655 to 1660. But it could be anywhere, any time, for it is a generalised nightmare of savage conflict. Cavalry and footsoldiers kill each other at close quarters, their faces contorted by fury. A pall of gunsmoke hangs over the bloody morass. In fact, many details, from the raised swords and standards at the heart of battle to the smoky atmosphere and rearing horses, are derived from Leonardo da Vinci’s depictions of war and his writings on how to paint it. Leonardo called war “a most bestial madness”: this is it.
National Gallery, London

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