Monuments to motherhood, cinematic dreams and a ‘wild beast’ – the week in art
Hannah Perry takes a spectacular approach, John Stezaker offers reality-bending works and classicist André Derain designs for theatre – all in your weekly dispatch
Hannah Perry: Manual Labour A spectacular multimedia approach goes with introspective themes as Perry explores motherhood, class and gender. • Baltic, Gateshead, until 16 March
André Derain and the Stage Designs for theatre by the French modern great who started out as a dangerous “wild beast” but became a disciplined classicist. • Cassius&Co, London, opens 12 September
Procession of the Sisterhood of the Boa Morte by Lena da Bahia. Photograph: Con/Vida
Amid a global movement to return artworks to their countries of origin, about 750 pieces by predominantly Black Brazilian artists are being donated to a museum in Bahia after being exhibited across the US and Canada for 30 years. Read more here.
The Wood Gatherer, Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, c. 1865-70
Born in the 18th century, Corot lived into the age of Manet and the impressionists. His fascination has to do with this sense of existing out of time, between worlds. This late painting by him is magically archaic. It creates a greenish, silverish pastoral dreamscape where nothing happens – give or take some wood being gathered. Yet in the stillness he suggests so much. There are even hints of the photographic age in the way the trees are silhouetted against the sleepy light. Corot is ultimately a storyteller: he conjures here a lonely, ghostly atmosphere in which you might encounter doubles or revenants. He is a quiet yet spookily great artist. • National Gallery, London
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