Support the Guardian

Fund independent journalism with £5 per month

Art Weekly
This newsletter is supported by National Art Pass

Volcanic prints, Mapplethorpe’s mates and Puerto Rico’s Palestinians – the week in art

The history of 500 years of print from Picasso to Emin, Robert Mapplethorpe’s portraits of his famous friends, and the Palestinian diaspora in Puerto Rico – all in your weekly dispatch

Sudden Shower below the Summit by Katsushika Hokusai, about 1831. From The Printmaker’s Art: Rembrandt to Rego at the National, Edinburgh.
Sudden Shower below the Summit by Katsushika Hokusai, about 1831. From The Printmaker’s Art: Rembrandt to Rego at the National, Edinburgh. Photograph: Paul Robins/Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Exhibition of the week

The Printmaker’s Art: Rembrandt to Rego
Five hundred years of woodcuts, etchings and linocuts with artists including Picasso and Tracey Emin.
National, Edinburgh, 2 December to 25 February

Also showing

Pesellino: A Renaissance Master Revealed
Rare chance to find out more about this artist who made a splash in Renaissance Florence before his early death.
National Gallery, London, 7 December to 10 March

Robert Mapplethorpe: Subject Object Image
The aesthetic power of Mapplethorpe’s photography cannot be denied.
Alison Jacques Gallery, London, until 20 January

Alia Farid – Elsewhere
Hand-woven rugs that portray the Palestinian community in Puerto Rico.
Chisenhale Gallery, London, 1 December to 4 February

Tim Lewis – The Forest Visits
Kinetic sculptures of animals provide fun for the Christmas season.
Flowers Gallery, London, until 1 January

Image of the week

Left Isleworth Mona Lisa. Right the original Mona Lisa
Left: Isleworth Mona Lisa; right the Mona Lisa. Composite: Alamy
Advertisement

The anonymous owners of the Isleworth Mona Lisa (so nicknamed, because it was previously owned by an art dealer there) are claiming that theirs is an early version of Leonardo’s iconic smiler. Could this really be true, or is it a case of mistaken identity? Read the full story here.

What we learned

Photographer Nan Goldin has been named art world’s most influential figure

A collective of South African women is weaving monumental tapestries of love and loss

Prince Gyasi will be the Pirelli calendar’s first Black photographer

Rishi Sunak and Greece might both be using the Parthenon marbles as a distraction

The annual prize for the best designed vinyl album cover has announced its shortlist

The US photographer Elliott Erwitt, has died, aged 95

A new exhibition celebrates the DIY creativity of the zine

Artist Banks Violette smashes up his own chandelier self-portraits

The astonishing story behind the “My TV girls” fetish photography archive

An artist is teaching robot dogs to paint

Masterpiece of the week

Venice: The Feast Day of St Roch by Canaletto, about 1735

The Feast Day of St Roch by Canaletto, about 1735

Canaletto is often seen as a tourist painter providing souvenirs for aristocrats on their Grand Tour, but here he shows us Venetian life from the inside. This is one of the shared rituals that sustained this ancient urban community. Plague was at last becoming less of a terror in the 1700s but here no one is taking any chances. A well dressed crowd gather in honour of St Roch (San Rocco), a saint who offered protection from plague. The classical building behind them is the Scuola Grande di San Rocco, home of a lay confraternity dedicated to the saint, richly decorated within by Tintoretto and other artists. Paintings have been lined up on its facade for the festival, as if art was a prayer.
National Gallery, London

Don’t forget

To follow us on X (Twitter): @GdnArtandDesign.

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