Andy Warhol: Profound artist, affectless hero, subversive icon
Warhol is set to eclipse Picasso with a $200m sale of Marilyn Monroe portrait, breaking records
Warhol is set to eclipse Picasso with a $200m sale of Marilyn Monroe portrait, breaking records
Book review: Metcalf is an accessible writer whose engaging collection spans a life’s work
The disappearance of Rocky’s robotic butler has the conspiracy censors twitching
Tim Davie wants to tackle left bias on comedy shows, good luck with that
Coronavirus ravages cultural schedule but online musical archives will reward raiding
There is a long history of actors deriding poorly received work, with Cats star Rebel Wilson being the latest
‘We have had to adjust,’ says one Chinese boss on the Addis Ababa-Djibouti line with masterly understatement
Since Chaucer there has been a rich tradition of writers inspired by religious buildings
Chris Johns: It seems contemporary Tories act like ‘Brideshead Revisited’ characters
Kristin Scott Thomas on how French cinema has better roles for women, playing Churchill's wife – and Brexit
Toilet Day is in fact a proper ‘day’, recognised by the UN. And cut the crap, it’s dead serious
Analysis: It’s not the writer or director, but the ‘showrunner’, who controls TV drama now
Most British writers today are Remainers. Which side would past literary giants take?
London Letter: Over 90% of books are on shelves, offering endless hours of browsing
China is building its first overseas military post in the tiny east Africa nation
A reboot of the fantasy series would no longer hide the Warrior Princess’s sexuality. It’s part of a social shift unthinkable a generation ago
The distinctive green herbal liqueur made by monks is back in vogue
Deborah Cavendish’s personal collection includes a previously unknown painting of Lismore Castle, her Elvis ephemera, and a signed first edition of ‘Brideshead Revisited’
Daniel O’Connell plays a valuable part in the journal’s rich and enduring history
War writing at heart is about the ambivalence of loyalty to class, nation, and friends, and of belief and the business of being human, and more recent Irish writing on the Great War, in reopening a closed chapter in our history, is no different in exploring all those ambiguities
Peter Carvosso: November 24th, 1947 - January 19th, 2015
‘The Confederation of Kilkenny in the 1640s would be a good subject for a picaresque novel full of spies and skulduggery. But as we say, it’s not my period’
Have fun, make mistakes, don’t try to live up to dreams, accept change and learn when to say ‘no’
The journalist may be 66 and less gonzo than before, but rage still fuels his cutting-edge prose
Irish boss Rhona Murphy will talk mobiles and experiments at Magazines Ireland event
Once, while trying to heal a cruel wound, I wrote to Howard. The reply came as a shock
Paul Howard chats to ‘Magical Mystery Tour’ collaborator Gerry Harrison about Tara Browne (the reputed subject of ‘A Day in the Life’), 1967 and LSD
It can be marvellous to read other people’s letters, as ‘Love, Nina: Despatches from Family Life’ illustrates perfectly
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices