![](https://fournews-assets-prod-s3-ew1-nmprod.s3.amazonaws.com/media/2017/05/Jon-Snow.jpg)
So will the HBOS trio go to jail?
Will anything be done? Will any of these people ever be brought to book? The record thus far suggests not a lot will happen.
602 items found
“I’ve always been ambitious to change the way British art galleries are,” says the artist Lubaina Himid, the first Black woman to win the Turner Prize four years ago.
Art education is marginalised in classrooms and under systemic assault.
We live much of our lives in the digital sphere in Britain in 2014, from dating to food shopping. But art?
The death of a young intern at banking firm Merrill Lynch is blamed on overwork. But why is the culture of long hours so endemic? Is it ambition – or pressure from the top?
Will anything be done? Will any of these people ever be brought to book? The record thus far suggests not a lot will happen.
After their victory against the All Blacks, England’s rugby players find themselves in the “group of death” for the 2015 World Cup, writes Ben Monro-Davies.
The man who defaced Mark Rothko’s Black on Maroon painting says he was acting on behalf of the yellowism movement. But how often is art attacked, and can it be restored? Chanel 4 News investigates.
He’s Britain’s most famous artist but Damien Hirst’s work is “con art” and its value like toxic debt, says Julian Spalding. In defence of Hirst, Art Review’s Oliver Basciano writes for Channel 4 News.
“Maybe this is what art does – exercises our present emotions with the consequences of other times experienced by the artist’s head and eye.”
Chinese artist Ai Weiwei appeared healthy but tense during his first meeting with his family since he was arrested more than a month ago, his wife says.
If we have another 50 diplomats in China, is there perhaps a chance we shall be able to track the disappearing dissidents like artist Ai Weiwei?
Sculptor Antony Gormley tells Channel 4 News the continued detention of renowned Chinese artist Ai Weiwei is a “disaster” for the art world, but insists “state barbarism” will not be silenced.
The Chinese artist and dissident Ai Weiwei remains missing after being detained at Beijing airport. A human rights expert tells Channel 4 News authorities will not say what the artist is accused of.
Liu Xiaobo’s selection for the Nobel Peace Prize was the right call, but does Washington and Whitehall’s concerns about his detention reek of hypocrisy following the arrest of Julian Assange, asks Jon Snow.