Exhibition of the week Charles II: Art and Power The Restoration in 1660 saw a rapid return of royal finery after the republican rule of Oliver Cromwell. Even the crown jewels needed remaking. Yet far from a frozen mask of reimposed regal authority, the new king, who had picked up some dissipated ways in his years of exile, created a libertine court. The sensualist royal painter Peter Lely captured all the decadent opulence perfectly. • Queen’s Gallery, London, 8 December to 13 May. Also showing A New Era: Scottish Modern Art 1900-1950 Scottish modern art from the fauve rawness of JD Fergusson to the pioneering pop of Eduardo Paolozzi is celebrated in this survey of the period from 1900 to 1950. • Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art (Modern Two), Edinburgh, 2 December to 10 June. Jakub Julian Ziolkowski Bizarre and grotesque paintings, ceramics and sculpture from this contemporary Polish surrealist. • Hauser & Wirth, London, 1 Dec to 10 February. John Stezaker Dadaist photographic collages of the human face that reawaken the subversive visions of early-20th-century art. • The Whitworth, Manchester, 1 December to June 2018. David Bomberg One of the most powerful British artists of the early 20th century, this talented East End youth rebelled against his teachers at the Slade to paint in an explosively futuristic style on the eve of the first world war. • Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, until 4 February. Masterpiece of the week |