Personality Types Emerge Through Colorful, Fragmented Shapes in Jason Boyd Kinsella’s Portraits
September 28, 2023
Marisol, the once popular Pop artist, is back in the spotlight in major travelling show
September 28, 2023This week: three big London shows, in depth. As Marina Abramović draws huge crowds to the Royal Academy of Arts in London, we interview her about the exhibition—the first ever dedicated to a woman artist in the Royal Academy’s main galleries.

Frans Hals, Portrait of a Couple, probably Isaac Abrahamsz Massa and Beatrix van der Laen (about 1622)
At the National Gallery, meanwhile, is a remarkable survey of the paintings of the 17th-century Dutch master Frans Hals, which will tour next year to Amsterdam and Berlin. We take a tour with Bart Cornelis, curator of the National’s incarnation of the show.

Peter Paul Rubens, Frans Snyders, Three Nymphs with a Cornucopia (1625-28)
And this episode’s Work of the Week is Peter Paul Rubens’s Three Nymphs with a Cornucopia of around 1625 to 1628 (painted with Frans Snyders). In the collection of the Prado in Madrid, it is one of a number of major loans to the exhibition Rubens and Women at the Dulwich Picture Gallery in London. Amy Orrock, one of the curators of the exhibition, tells us more.
- Marina Abramović, Royal Academy of Arts, London, until 1 January 2024. You can hear our interview with Abramović during the Covid lockdown in our episode from 8 May 2020, and a conversation with Tate Modern’s Catherine Wood about her long-term partner and collaborator Ulay, following his death in 2020, in the episode from 6 March that year
- The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Frans Hals, National Gallery, London, until 21 January 2024
- Rubens & Women, Dulwich Picture Gallery, London, until 28 January 2024