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 | | Towering trunks, disturbing dolls and deep-sea daydreams – the week in art | | A veteran environmentalist celebrates trees, the Quay Brothers create an atmosphere and artists take a deep dive below the waves – all in your weekly dispatch | |  |  Giuseppe Penone’s Respirare l’Ombra (Breathe the Shadow), 1999. Photograph: © Archivio Penone
| |  | Jonathan Jones |
| | Exhibition of the week Giuseppe Penone: Thoughts in the Roots This veteran environmental artist has been celebrating trees for almost six decades. Does his bark still have bite? • Serpentine, London, 3 April to 7 September Also showing Dormitorium: The Film Décors of the Quay Brothers Creepy dolls and east European atmosphere from the artists formerly known as the Brothers Quay. Watch out for the stag ejaculant. • Swedenborg Society, London, until 4 April Textiles: The Art of Mankind Ambitious global overview of textiles as art, from ancient times to our own era. • Fashion and Textile Museum, London, until 7 September José María Velasco Informative and scientifically observant views of 19th-century Mexico – but Velasco doesn’t rock. Read the full review here. • National Gallery, London, 29 March to 17 August Undersea Imaginary worlds of the sea from premodern monsters to contemporary daydreams, with Paul Delvaux and Michael Armitage. • Hastings Contemporary, 29 March to 14 September Image of the week | | |  | Advertisement |  |
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 | | If you don’t think this portrait looks much like Donald Trump, you and he are in agreement … bigly! With a laser-like focus on urgent domestic matters, the US president this week bemoaned that the painting hanging in the Colorado state capitol building didn’t flatter him and demanded it be taken down. He even found time to insult its creator, saying: “The artist also did President Obama, and he looks wonderful, but the one on [sic] me is truly the worst. She must have lost her talent as she got older.” Full story here. SAD. What we learned Grayson Perry has a new alter ego, who has her own alter ego Spanish artist Joan Miró painted over his mother’s portrait A new documentary about female war artists has a cringey title New York’s Frick collection is reopening, and it’s teeming with masterpieces Photographer and teacher Hicham Benohoud turned his students into art A book about Picasso’s lovers might not be the feminist slam dunk it wishes Burmese political prisoner and painter Htein Lin befriended his guards so he could smuggle in paint American artist Thomas Kinkade was a proto-influencer who built a multimillion dollar brand Masterpiece of the week | | |  | | | The Avenue at Middelharnis by Meindert Hobbema, 1689 Some of the most characterful trees in art soar above a road in this renowned landscape. These Dutch alders have a very distinctive appearance with their fluffy foliage crowns and branchless, but furry leaved, tall trunks. They resemble palm trees in Los Angeles, which might be one reason why David Hockney is fascinated by this work. What Hockney has spoken about and imitated in his own art, however, is Hobbema’s complex perspective that he claims has two vanishing points. This is also a highly symbolic view of a humanised landscape. The new Dutch Republic in the 17th century relied for its success, and even survival, on land reclaimed from the sea. The low-lying flat vista here evokes a Dutch world where human intervention shapes nature. It would be barren without the tended, manicured avenue of alders that leads gently into town in a harmonious ideal of nature governed wisely by its human regents. • National Gallery, London 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] | |
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