Rose Wylie, Yellow Strip, 2006 (detail)

Rose Wylie Reviewed in The Telegraph

Brian Sewell once described one of Rose Wylie’s unruly pictures in the Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition as “a daub worthy of a child of four”. Yet, despite the late art critic’s put-down, here she is more than a decade later, at the age of 91, taking over the main galleries at Burlington House (the first female British painter to do so), with a survey of her output since 1989. Although the wilful roughness of her approach will still, no doubt, get up many people’s noses, there won’t be a more invigorating exhibition all year. Wylie’s work is irreverent, irrepressible, anarchic – and intensely charismatic. This is a blast.  Read more.