Ai Weiwei smashes it, Steve McQueen stuns and Brookside goes ceramic – the week in art | Art and design

Exhibition of the week

Ai Weiwei: Making Sense
Lego and marble are among the materials in this exhibition of Ai Weiwei’s grand designs.
Design Museum, London, 7 April to 30 July

Also showing

Steve McQueen: Grenfell
Not easy watching, the Oscar and Turner prize-winner’s new film remembers Grenfell.
Serpentine, London, 7 April to 10 May

Lindsey Mendick
Slapstick sculpture, surreal ceramics and a comic horror journey into the soap history of Brookside.
Yorkshire Sculpture Park until 3 September

Alberta Whittle
The biggest show of Whittle’s work to date, including tapestry and film among her passionate installations.
Scottish National Museum of Modern Art, Edinburgh, until 7 January

I saw the other side of the sun with you
This survey of women surrealists from eastern Europe introduces such figures as Teresa Żarnower, Alina Szapocznikow and Zofia Rydet.
Cromwell Place, London, 12–30 April

Image of the week

Photograph: Courtesy of the artist

These robots are among the 100 artists and designers taking part in this year’s NGV Triennial, opening in Melbourne in December, alongside artists such as Yoko Ono and Tracey Emin. They will work for four months using sticks of oil paint, having been programmed to understand a range of commands, which they will execute in whatever order they see fit – down to the direction the arm moves, how hard it presses the canvas and whether it paints a dot or a line.

What we learned

Elizabeth Siddal, immortalised in the painting Ophelia by John Everett Millais, was an artist

The king’s coronation invitation makes it look like he’s planning to be crowned Lord of Summer Isle

Painter Kehinde Wiley was confronted with a difficult question by his model, Barack Obama

South African artist-potter Hylton Nel has made autobiographical plates for 60 years

An all-female exhibition at Hepworth Wakefield expands the expectations of what a sculptor can be

Ai Weiwei only cares about the process of making art, telling us: “the final product is just a corpse to me”

The standout talent in the Tate Britain Rossettis exhibition isn’t who you’d think

A Michael Armitage tapestry celebrating refuse collectors has been acquired by the National Portrait Gallery

Funding cuts and the cost of living crisis have caused Newcastle’s Side gallery to close

Sri Lanka-born painter George Beven and the sculptor Rory Young died this week. Picasso died 50 years ago this Sunday

Masterpiece of the week

Costanza Caetani, in the style of Domenico Ghirlandaio, 1480-9

Costanza Caetani.
Photograph: Album/Alamy

Costanza Caetani, who was born a Medici, looks out boldly in a pose that emphasises dynamism and personality: she almost swaggers as she leans her elbow confidently over a parapet, holding orange blossoms that symbolise her recent marriage. Her big characterful face doesn’t point sideways in static profile, as was the case in many earlier Italian portraits of women, but engages you directly. Such strong and sensitive portraiture of women started in Flemish art in the early 1400s and was brought to Florence by Botticelli and Leonardo da Vinci. The anonymous artist who did this was part of that revolution in the female image.
National Gallery

Don’t forget

To follow us on 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 [email protected]

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here