Brian Dillon

Showing results 1-20 of 62

How do we read The Sexual Life of Catherine M in the age of #MeToo and autofiction?

BY Brian Dillon |

On the centenary of the photographer’s birth, an outtake of his iconic portrait of William Casby, a self-conscious image captured alongside five generations of his family

BY Brian Dillon |

In essays covering Samuel Beckett to Tacita Dean, the writer reflects on irresistible artworks

BY Bailey Trela |

The writer presents a playlist which captures Kate Bush's digital psychedelia

BY Brian Dillon |

Brian Dillon on the 40th anniversary of the singer’s lesser-known record, The Dreaming

BY Brian Dillon |

Brian Dillon on the television programme’s museum of images and memories 

BY Brian Dillon |

The artist’s first novel proceeds by image and incantation rather than much in the way of explicit plot

BY Brian Dillon |

From enfant terrible of British ballet to a retrospective at the Barbican Gallery, how the choreographer and performer found a home in the contemporary art world 

BY Brian Dillon |

‘There is pain and suffering in these pictures, but also pure possibility’

BY Brian Dillon |

Learning to survive a jittering feed of survivalist pro tips and transhumanist dreck

BY Brian Dillon |

In ‘Coventry’, events seem to happen to somebody else, to a person Cusk repeatedly exposes and judges

BY Brian Dillon |

‘It’s the way he talks about his own death that amazed then and impresses today’

BY Brian Dillon |

Found first in the pages of NME, an homage to the critic who brought an antic traduction of high French theory to the study of contemporary pop

BY Brian Dillon |

The politics of the choco-pie, a materialist account of ‘cultural appropriation’ and Acid Corbynism: what to read this weekend

Revision and revolt in the work of Nairy Baghramian

BY Brian Dillon |

From the Women's Strike to a march that cancels itself out: what to read this weekend

BY Paul Clinton |

Author and poet Susan Stewart's new book shows her abiding concern with lyric

BY Brian Dillon |

From Umberto Eco on fascism to Thomas Pynchon’s stand-in: what to read this weekend

BY Paul Clinton |

Tate Modern, London, UK

BY Brian Dillon |

From Michael Gove to Mary Hurrell to Orange is The New Black, the year in review

BY Brian Dillon |