Modernism

The Two Roberts drank, danced, fought – but how good was their art?

8 November 2025 9:00 am

The Two Roberts, Robert MacBryde (1913-66) and Robert Colquhoun (1914-62), are figures of a lost British bohemia. Both born in…

The triumph of classical architecture

25 October 2025 9:00 am

It is very hard to imagine the University of Oxford ever constructing a modernist building again. This is the significance…

Picasso’s ravishing work for the ballet

30 August 2025 4:00 am

Visitors to the Victoria and Albert Museum’s new storehouse in Stratford’s Olympic Park are being enthralled by an atmospherically lit…

The two young women who blazed a trail for modernism in Ireland

3 May 2025 9:00 am

In 1921, the sternly abstract cubist Albert Gleizes opened the door of his Parisian apartment to two young women in…

The polarising poet, sculptor and ‘avant-gardener’ who maintained a private militia

26 April 2025 9:00 am

Not many artists engage in the maintenance of a private militia, and it seems fair to assume that those who…

Was Sir John Soane one of the first modernists?

19 April 2025 9:00 am

Sir John Soane’s story is a good one. Born in 1753 to a bricklayer, at 15 he was apprenticed to…

The liberating force of musical modernism

5 April 2025 9:00 am

It’s Arvo Part’s 90th birthday year, which is good news if you like your minimalism glum, low and very, very…

Was Brazil the real birthplace of modernism?

25 January 2025 9:00 am

A paradox of art history: to understand the artists of the past, it helps to study how, and where, they…

The architectural provocations of I.M. Pei

11 January 2025 9:00 am

When first considering architects for the new Louvre in 1981, Emile Biasini, the project’s head, liked that I.M. Pei was…

Schoenberg owes his survival to crime drama

26 October 2024 9:00 am

George Gershwin once made a home movie of Arnold Schoenberg grinning in a suit on his tennis court in Beverly…

The Stockhausen work that is worth braving

31 August 2024 9:00 am

Grade: A- One of the best one-liners attributed to Sir Thomas Beecham refers to the stridently avant-garde Karlheinz Stockhausen: ‘I’ve…

I’m not convinced Thomas Heatherwick is the best person to be discussing boring buildings

28 October 2023 9:00 am

Architects are often snobby about – and no doubt jealous of – the designer Thomas Heatherwick, who isn’t an actual…

In search of utopia: Chevengur, by Andrey Platonov, reviewed

28 October 2023 9:00 am

After crossing the vast steppe, Sasha Dvanov reaches an isolated town where the communist ideal appears to have been achieved. But at what cost?

The house that Rach built

2 September 2023 9:00 am

Fast cars, minimalist design and en suite bathrooms: Richard Bratby visits the composer’s starkly modern Swiss home

The artist’s artist

29 October 2022 9:00 am

Pity the poor curators of major exhibitions struggling to find fresh takes on famous masters. The curators of Tate Modern’s…

A gay time by the sea

23 July 2022 9:00 am

In the winter of 1952 the 21-year-old sculptor John Milne travelled to St Ives in Cornwall to take up a…

Lend me your ears

9 April 2022 9:00 am

Don’t read James Joyce’s Ulysses, says John Phipps. Listen to it

Shaw thing

2 April 2022 9:00 am

It’s good of Nicholas Hytner to let Londoners see David Hare’s new play before it travels to Broadway where it…

Too hot to handle

5 March 2022 9:00 am

This year is the centenary of the birth of Iannis Xenakis, the Greek composer-architect who called himself an ancient Greek…

The beauty of brutalism

5 February 2022 9:00 am

Nothing divides the British like modernist architecture. Traditionalists are suspicious of its utopian ambitions and dismiss it as ugly; proponents…

The cowpat myth

5 February 2022 9:00 am

He is caricatured as a populist and purveyor of ‘folky-wolky’ melodies, says Richard Bratby, but Vaughan Williams was a modernist master of uncompromising originality

Disappearing doilies

29 January 2022 9:00 am

This week marks the beginning of modernism season on BBC Radio 3 and 4, which means it’s time for some…

The coming of barbarism

15 January 2022 9:00 am

There’s a scene in Martin Amis’s 1990s revenge comedy The Information in which a book reviewer, who’s crushed by his…

Sent to Coventry

9 October 2021 9:00 am

The story is likely apocryphal — and so disgraceful I almost hesitate to tell it — but it goes like…

Doyenne of applied arts

28 August 2021 9:00 am

Great Swiss artists, like famous Belgians, might seem to be an amusingly underpopulated category. Actually, as with celebrated Flemings and…