ART: THE FIVE BEST SHOWS IN LONDON
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Your support makes all the difference.Jackson Pollock Tate Gallery
Big retrospective for the legendary hero of Abstract Expressionism (going on Old Master). The build- up is slow and the end is sorry, but the brief "drip" period deserves every superlative. To 6 Jun
Portraits by Ingres National Gallery
Some of the smartest, intensest portraits ever - sex and money in perfect harmony; images of triumphant bourgeois luxury. To 25 Apr
Monet in the 20th Century Royal Academy
The strange last works of Impressionism. The gardens and lily ponds at Giverny dissolve into fiery lights - and in the circumstances you will, too. To 18 Apr
Patrick Caulfield Hayward Gallery
The modern object-world made luminous. Caulfield is a virtuoso of many styles, and this retrospective offers the range - notably, those fat, laconic outlines flooded with translucent colour. To 11 May
Picasso & photography Barbican Gallery
An enlightening look at the role of the camera in Picasso's creative development. To 28 Mar
... AND BEYOND
Richard Deacon Tate, Liverpool
Chunky, curvaceous assemblages of wood, metal, glass and plastic - some gigantic, some humble - by the noted Eighties' sculptor. To 16 May
Oppe Watercolour Collection Whitworth, Manchester
Classic British watercolours made largely outdoors, including Alexander Cozens' sketches, Constable, John Sell Cotman and Francis Towne. To 5 Apr
Yinka Shonibare IKON, Birmingham
"Dressing Down": in a series of photographic and sculptural tableaux the artist explores notions of ethnicity and questions the construction of cultural identity. To 5 Apr
Bob Law Kettle's Yard, Cambridge
Law was once known for his completely black mimimalist pictures. Here's a wider view of his work: Cornish landscape beginnings, colour, and tiny, toy-like constructions. To 25 Apr
Willie Doherty & James Casebere MOMA, Oxford
Doherty's nervy, multi-screen video installation reflecting on sectarian terror. Casebere's delicate, moody photos of architectural models. To 4 Apr
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