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Tate Etc. is an arts magazine produced within Britain's Tate organisation of arts and museums. It has the largest circulation of any art magazine in the world. [1] The magazine was edited by Simon Grant from its launch in 2004 until the Autumn 2021 issue. [2] As well as being sold in shops, the magazine is sent for free to Tate members. [3]
The Call; Cambrian Quarterly Magazine and Celtic Repertory; Cambridge Literary Review; Camera Owner; Camerawork; Candis Magazine; Canoe & Kayak UK; Cantab; Careless Talk Costs Lives
Aquila (children's magazine) Archive (magazine) Arena (magazine) Arena Three; Armchair Science; The Art Journal; The Art Newspaper; The Artist (UK magazine) The Artist and Journal of Home Culture; Artrocker (magazine) Arty (magazine) Asbri; Asiamoney; The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British India and Its Dependencies; Astronomy Now ...
Magazine of Art, 1878–1904, London- and New York City–based monthly visual arts magazine; Marg, quarterly Indian art magazine and a publisher of books on the arts, based in Mumbai; Mavo, Japanese dadaist art magazine, edited by Tatsuo Okada and Tomoyoshi Murayama, published between 1924–1925
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
New England Review; New Letters (1970–current) The New Quarterly (1981–current, Canada) New South; New York Quarterly (1933–current) The New York Review of Books; The New York Times Book Review; The New Yorker (1925–current) News from the Republic of Letters; The Newtowner: An Arts and Literary Magazine; NOON (2000–current) North ...
The Bucks County Courier Times took home eight awards in this year’s Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association’s annual Keystone awards including the state’s most prestigious journalism award.. The ...
In 1954 Henri Matisse wrote for the magazine. [3] Renaming itself Arts Review in March 1961, the magazine charted the advent of Pop art and the sharper look of ‘New Generation’ sculpture and hard-edge painting, while young critics like Brian Sewell balanced the merits of non-figurative art against socialist realism, and Jasia Reichardt, the ...