New releases from Steve Swallow, Neil Young & The Chrome Hearts, and Ady Johnson
IN 1888, Vincent van Gogh sold The Red Vineyard — a vibrant field of colour, abuzz with labourers — to an intimate supporter for today’s equivalent of £1,600. These days van Gogh™ is a billion-dollar industry.
Over the decades there have been a number of film accounts of van Gogh’s work and life, most recently in the first fully painted feature film Loving Vincent in which, beginning a year after his death, his animated paintings tell his story.
Like the narrative of the simple and honest Christ, whose spectacular legacy built majestic cathedrals and led to fugues and counterpoint, van Gogh has taken on a second life.
MIRANDA RICHMOND relishes the gloriously liberated art of Roy Oxlade, and traces his method back to the thinking of David Bomberg, his acknowledged teacher
JULIA THOMAS unpicks the mental processes that explain why book-to-film adaptations so often disappoint
JOHN GREEN welcomes a remarkable study of Mozambique’s most renowned contemporary artist
BLANE SAVAGE recommends the display of nine previously unseen works by the Glaswegian artist, novelist and playwright


