Tribe With Bruce Parry review – he loses his mind on drugs … and it doesn’t disappoint | Television & radio

It is, scarily, 20 years since Bruce Parry first brought Tribe to the BBC. The diffident but determined former Royal Marine visited Indigenous people in the world’s most remote places and, by living as one of them, earned a level of trust that previous documentary-makers had struggled to achieve. Parry was more patient, more respectful … Read more

As Trump rewrites even America’s history, institutions have two choices – submit or find ways to resist | Charlotte Higgins

It has come to this: we are now in Ministry of Truth territory. In Washington DC, the Smithsonian Institution, the US’s ensemble of 21 great national museums, last week became the subject of an executive order by President Donald Trump. “Distorted narratives” are to be rooted out. There will be no more of the “corrosive … Read more

‘Nothing stopped her’: the 136 reasons why Vanessa Bell is breaking free of Bloomsbury | Art and design

When you think of the Bloomsbury Group – the writers, artists and intellectuals who congregated at 46 Gordon Square in London in the early 20th century – you might think of Virginia Woolf; the Omega Workshops, which brought fine art to modernist designs; Charleston, a farmhouse in Sussex, frequented by core members who painted every … Read more

March design news: Maurzio Cattelan goes Greek, art teapots and house paint that changes colour | Design

This is the final monthly design news round-up, so we’ve made it a bumper edition. As well as previewing some shows that will be this year’s Salone del Mobile in Milan, there’s pyjamas from Grayson Perry and Greek mythology reinterpreted by conceptual artist Maurizio Cattelan. Enjoy. Maurizio Cattelan’s Sisyphus poster. Photograph: Gagosian If you’ve followed … Read more

David Dimbleby’s hugely compelling history of capitalism: best podcasts of the week | Television & radio

Pick of the weekInvisible Hands: The History Podcast David Dimbleby takes on the history of capitalism. It’s a slick listen that opens in a barrage of air raid sirens and rumbling aircraft engines as Anthony Fisher watches his brother die while they both fly planes during the second world war – before going on to … Read more