The French actor is best known for her work in arthouse films such as Attenberg and The Lobster. So what attracted her to a British TV drama about a three-way relationship?
The Guardian newspaper has unveiled a new look that includes a redesigned wordmark.
Militant group responsible for more than 800 deaths says it has ‘dissolved all its structures’
덴피 작가님의 <불사자에게는 수호령이 있었다> 표지 일러스트를 작업했습니다! 💫
The satellite that would catch stardust, China's new aircraft carrier and a canoe made using origami
The son of Oliver Postgate, creator of the 1970s show, reveals what was in the scripts for the delightful and puzzling swannee-whistle creatures
Jill Barklem, the creator of Brambly Hedge, has got together with the Wildlife Trusts to bring us this beautiful gallery of fictional and real wood mice, voles, shrews, harvest mice – and the natural world they live in
Phoebe Bridgers, Lucy Dacus and Julien Baker are three of the best – and most obsessed-over – songwriters today. Ahead of a debut album together, they explain why they go to group therapy
Entire online communities have developed around naming this 17-second snippet of catchy pop – and three years after it was uploaded no one has solved the mystery
Photographer Anna Gordon has been granted extraordinary access to the historically secretive Freemasonry for Women lodge, one of two Grand Lodges for women in the UK operating for more than a century, as it looks to the future
East West Street author Philippe Sands uncovers secrets and lies on the trail of Otto Wächter, his devoted wife – and the son brought up to believe his father was a decent man
Ellen Forney's Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo & Me is a deeply personal graphic memoir of her bipolar disorder
On the eve of a major exhibition on the printmaker, painter and poet, Fiona Maddocks chooses her 10 favourite works
He should be as famous as Edvard Munch, but the world seems to have forgotten him – until now. Astrup is getting his first major show outside Norway ... and his visions of the Scandinavian landscape are eerie and sublime
Marcel Berlins: Imagine my distress to discover that a whole swathe of English male media types, academics and students were claiming similar intimacy with the book, and attesting to its significance for them.
Not everything Siri hears is completely private, according to the Guardian.
An atrocity unpunished ... forget the triumphant tales of abolition – the brutal death of a teenage slave girl reveals important truths of Britain’s imperial history
The Dutch artist’s visual tricks and teases continue to delight and infuriate us – here is some of his best work
The lemmings didn’t jump – they were pushed
The German-Austrian actor on why he would never predict winning an Oscar, being happy to play Doctor Who and working with a stunt strudel
From Puss In Boots to The Company of Wolves, entrants to the 2012 Book Illustration competition were challenged to design a new edition of one of Angela Carter's most sensuous and sinister works, her short story collection The Bloody Chamber. Take a look at the efforts of the six illustrators shortlisted for the contest, run by the House of Illustration and The Folio Society
Guardian photographer Sarah Lee describes her experience as a stills photographer on the set of the joint British-German Netflix production starring Jeremy Irons
The former prime minister’s parliamentary outburst was decisive winner of Guardian Australia’s poll, in results marked by more than a few surprises
Skulls wearing gas masks, roaming rats and rotting carcasses of animals and humans ... Der Krieg, the series of prints Otto Dix published in 1924, is a terrifying vision of the apocalypse that actually happened on Europe's soil 100 years ago – and proves that it was only German artists who saw the first world war clearly
A look back at the best pics of the past 12 months – from viral photos to momentous moments, fine-art award winners and staff highlights
Film-maker and writer is first female artist named by ArtReview Power 100 as most influential person
Flush with awards after The Lost Daughter and Cabaret made her a star, Buckley has made musical alchemy with guitarist Butler. They discuss why being raw and unguarded is essential for great art
Welcome back to a 16 part series, looking at how your Myers Briggs personality profile affects your decorating choices. Last week I addressed the INTP (Thinker) type, and this week I’m back to discuss the ESTJ (Guardian). In this series, it’s important to remember that everyone has different tastes when it comes to home decor, but each […]
The story of Alan Turing has a hold on the world's imagination. A Northerner post on the subject in January was the most-viewed item on the Guardian's whole website that week. Now the chair of the centenary celebrations, Prof Barry Cooper, starts a series of guest posts for us
Phoebe Bridgers, Lucy Dacus and Julien Baker are three of the best – and most obsessed-over – songwriters today. Ahead of a debut album together, they explain why they go to group therapy
From the Edge Chronicles, to Goth Girl, to Ottoline to The Sleeper and the Spindle, revel in the illustrations of Chris Riddell, who has just been crowned children’s laureate
Novelist’s work on the philosopher’s landmark Ethics helped develop her astute grasp of human emotion
The Delft School artist’s meta bird painting found superstardom thanks to a 19th century critic - and Donna Tartt
Cyborg Manifesto author and philosopher who explores the nature of reality discusses the science wars and climate activism
See nine decades of front pages from the TV and radio magazine, covering events including world war two, the moon landings and Doctor Who
Conrad’s novella of colonial atrocity has inspired powerful images from entrants to a competition to illustrate the book. Take a look at a gallery of their work
What the Observer political cartoonist Chris Riddell has been up to with Britain’s favourite revolutionary…
The actor who saved humankind in pandemic hit Contagion is set to terrify viewers in Saint Maud. She talks about loving horror, quitting Game of Thrones – and turning into a bowl of porridge
The Dutch artist’s visual tricks and teases continue to delight and infuriate us – here is some of his best work
Ryan Murphy’s hit show brings New York’s ballroom culture to the BBC. Its stars talk about taking the subculture to the masses
Norman Stone’s The Most Reluctant Convert follows author’s conversion from atheism to Christianity
This adaptation of Henry Fielding’s sexy period romance is recast as a tale of a moping wally falling for a dullard – and the spark never lights
The Mischief Theatre Company has a flourishing stage and TV franchise, with a second Christmas special on the way. The trio discuss how difficult it is making mistakes go right
Born with tibial hemimelia, Japanese artist Mari Katayama chose to have her legs amputated at the age of nine. Now she uses her body in her dazzling work, adorned with crystals, seashells and lifesize dolls
From allegory to advertising, artists have frequently depicted the pleasures and pitfalls of drink in their work.
Gallery: This retrospective, starting this week at Tate Modern, brings together the inscrutable, funny, and astonishingly wide-ranging pop art created by Sigmar Polke across nearly 50 years of work