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Viewing Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael

Three titans of the Italian Renaissance takeover the Royal Academy of Arts from this week, in a scintillating exploration of the historic ongoing rivalry between Michelangelo and Leonardo, the influence of both artists on the younger prodigy, Raphael. The exhibition brings together exceptional drawings – and plenty of salacious art history that shows another side to these major figures.

The feud between the Renaissance revolutionaries, legend has it, began when both were commissioned to create battle scenes for the Council Hall at the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence. Da Vinci’s encaustic technique was botched and caused paint to seep into Michaelangelo’s fresco; the latter responded by destroying his own work. The commission was never completed – but the exhibition includes the sketches for the murals by both artists illustrating what might have been, had the two been able to reconcile their artistic and personal differences.

The exhibition begins in Florence, in January of 1504, the moment when Michelangelo and Leonardo met, both having returned to live in their home city. Then both revered artists with powerful patrons behind them, the occasion of their meeting was to consult on where Michelangelo’s recently completed commission, the David sculpture should be placed – Da Vinci is reported to have said it would be best to cover the statue up. In September of that year, the colossal 17ft marble masterpiece would be unveiled in the public square in front of the Palazzo della Signora. Michelangelo later retorted that he felt nothing on viewing Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa.

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Dates
09 November 2024 — 16 February 2025

Viewing Chila Kumari Singh Burman Compton Verney

Equally spectacular and surreal is this dazzling Chila Kumari Singh Burman exhibition, unveiled at Compton Verney today. As the darkness creeps in ever earlier, Burman’s brilliant exhibition brings illumination to the countryside, lighting up the historic facades of Compton Verney with the artist’s trademark neon works that she has made since lighting up the Tate Britain with her widely acclaimed installation in 2020.

Beyond the kaleidoscopic intervention that takes over the front of the house, the exhibition continues inside with array of works from new and recent sculptures, many of which have not been shown before, to earlier prints, collages and films. It’s Burman’s largest exhibition in recent years, and encompasses a 40-year period in which the artist has explored her Hindu-Punjabi cultural identity, feminism, and working class Liverpudlian upbringing, amongst other themes.

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Dates
30 October 2024 — 26 January 2025

Viewing Meriem Bennani: For My Best Family

It’s Halloween – and this week we’re all about the supernatural and otherworldly shows. First up is a weirdly wonderful project by Meriem Bennani, the Moroccan artist’s largest to date. For My Best Family creates a spooky atmosphere over two floors of Fondazione Prada in the form of a multi-sensory work examining how to be together.

A mechanical installation made up of 192 flip flops cheekily titled Sole crushing sees the shows march in eerie autonomy to a ballet-symphony-riot. It’s cathartic and chaotic, and intended to also evoke a state of delirium, something like the noise of a stadium, or the sounds of a Moroccan deqqa marrakchia.

Elsewhere, there’s a new film Bennani has made in collaboration with Orian Barki, set in a world of anthropomorphic animals, following the story of a Moroccan jackal filmmaker living in New York. The fiction within a fiction with its animated animal protagonists is both funny and touching, and contemplates how animation can be a potent vessel for meaningful messages in troubling times.

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Dates
31 October 2024 — 24 February 2025
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