Jenny Saville: The Anatomy of PaintingA hugely impressive display of skill and imagination that proves Saville a tremendous painter of beauty, terror and everything in between.Read the review.National Portrait Gallery, London, until 7 September
Abstract EroticHow Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse and Alice Adams subverted the formal chill of 1960s minimalism with witty intrusions of desire.The Courtauld, London, until 14 September
WatteauSubtle drawings by this wonderfully tender, sensual visionary of the rococo age.British Museum, London, until 14 September
Richard RogersThe postmodern British architect is celebrated in the home of pre-modern architectural genius John Soane.Sir John Soane’s Museum, London, until 21 September
Daphne WrightIrish artist Wright has created new sculptures in direct response to the Ashmolean Museum’s collection.Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, until 8 February
This is Samson and Delilah by Peter Paul Rubens. Or is it? Some commentators, such as art historian Euphrosyne Doxiadis,claim the National Gallery’s oil painting is a fake, calling it “a shoddy artefact, lacking the brilliance of my favourite European painter”.Our critic contendsthat the painting doesn’t look typical of Rubens for good reason: it is his passionate attempt to paint like someone else.
William Kentridge’s vast sculptures are landing in Yorkshire
The crystal-covered artwork Van Gogh’s Chair couldn’t support the weight of one tourist
Photographer Taryn Simon captured the cat that made Trump a laughing stock
Daredevil motorcyclists and Italian bloodletting rituals are in contention for this year’s Jarman award
Elizabeth Peyton’s portrait of the Gallagher brothers is expected to reach £1.5m at auction
Christelle Oyiri gave herself horns and a tail for her plastic surgery inspired selfie sculptures
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Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral has been given Grade I-listed building status
A new show at the Getty Center in LA showcases 100 years of queer art, including a $3 bill
The Virgin Suckling the Infant Christ, about 1565-1575, by Titian
There is a simple heartfelt humanity to this painting of a mother breastfeeding her child that is typical of Titian, whose images of women range from unabashed nudes to intimate portraits yet are always loving, one way or another. By the time he painted this, in the final decade of his long life, he had seen and painted so much. He throws away big ambitions, watches this tender moment between mother and baby, and paints with soft, expressive reverence. Yet there’s another side to it: the composition echoes his rival Michelangelo, who had recently died. For decades these last surviving giants of the high Renaissance had looked at and tried to outdo one another, but here, perhaps, Titian pays tribute to Michelangelo as he breathes a prayer for them both.National Gallery, London
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