All the best art exhibitions from across London and the rest of the UK plus The Telegraph's reviews of those you should go to see.
RICHARD HAMILTON (Tate Modern, London SE1; until May 26)
This exhibition provides our most extensive overview of Hamilton’s career to date. He may yet prove to have been the most significant British artist of the second half of the 20th century. Read The Telegraph's Richard Hamilton review.
DAVID BAILEY: BAILEY'S STARDUST (National Portrait Gallery, London WC2; until June 1)
Containing more than 250 photographs from five decades, this retrospective highlights David Bailey's classic aesthetic. Read The Telegraph's David Bailey: Bailey's Stardust review.
GEORGIANS REVEALED: LIFE, STYLE AND THE MAKING OF MODERN BRITAIN (British Library, London NW1; until March 11)
With more than 200 objects including paintings, playbills and prints, as well as porcelain teacups, natty red leather shoes and even the philosopher Jeremy Bentham’s violin, the exhibition makes a persuasive case that the Georgians fashioned modern British society. Read The Telegraph's Georgians Revealed: Life, Style and the Making of Modern Britain review.
HOCKNEY: PRINTMAKER (Dulwich Picture Gallery, London SE2; until May 11)
This joyous show of his 60-year printmaking career reminds us that, for all his grumbles lately, David Hockney has been one of Britain's great artists. Read The Telegraph's Hockney: Printmaker review.
JOSEPH WRIGHT OF DERBY: BATH AND BEYOND (The Holburne Museum, Bath; until May 5)
The Holburne Museum has put together a cracking loan show that tells us more about the art of this many faceted painter than many of the larger efforts we’ve seen over the years. Read The Telegraph'sJoseph Wright of Derby: Bath and Beyond review.
LOUISE BOURGEOIS: A WOMAN WITHOUT SECRETS (Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh; until May 18)
This is the woman who paved the way for controversial female artists like Tracey Emin and Sarah Lucas: there are splodgily suggestive cast latex forms, precisely chiselled marble sculptures, books created from old fabric samples showing a beautifully modulated sense of colour, large vitrines containing enigmatic objects. Read The Telegraph's Louise Bourgeois: A Woman Without Secrets review.
See the complete list here