The portraits in the National Gallery\u2019s new retrospective of the artist Frans Hals capture his informal and fresh style which contrasted with other masters like Vermeer and Rembrandt. We hear from the exhibition\u2019s curator Bart Cornelis and by the writer Benjamin Moser whose forthcoming book The Upside-Down World describes his lifelong passion for the art of what\u2019s often called the Dutch Golden Age.
The enthusiasm of politicians for the spectacular U-turn has reached the cultural sphere; in Scotland the government has U-turned a U-turn in its arts funding. Joyce McMillan, The Scotsman\u2019s theatre critic and political columnist, explains what has happened and not happened and what it all means for the arts in her country.
As a retrospective of her work opens at the Courtauld Gallery in London, Claudette Johnson talks to Tom Sutcliffe about her portraits of Black women, her work in the 1980s with the BLK art group and how Rembrandt and Toulouse Lautrec\u2019s approach to painting women has inspired her.
And Ghosts are in the ether\u2026 an upsurge of interest in the supernatural often coincides with disruptive events like the Covid pandemic. Tom Sutcliffe is joined by Jeanette Winterson whose new book Night Side of the River tells 13 ghost stories, and by Danny Robins\u2019 whose book Into the Uncanny has just been published.
Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe\nProducer: Julian May