GLENN BURGESS suggests that, despite his record in Spain, Orwell’s enduring commitment to socialist revolution underpins his late novels

ALGORITHMS have existed since the ancient Greeks and they are increasingly becoming a part of everyday life in the digital age.
We’re not just seeing their practical use in the realm of science, computing and mathematics but also in the arts – particularly in electronic music – and now, as the British Library’s resident artist Michael Takeo Magruder skilfully demonstrates, even in art installations.
Images and metadata from 18th and 19th-century maps of London, Paris, New York and Chicago have been used for the four works on display and, as Magruder explains to me on a guided tour of the free exhibition, the painstaking operation originally involved a bank of one million images of historic urban maps in the British Library’s online digital archive.

WILL STONE relishes the chance to hear the Isle of Wight indie sensation in an intimate setting

WILL STONE fact-checks the colourful life of Ozzy Osbourne

WILL STONE witnesses a thrilling festival super-charged with opposition to the British government’s policies on Gaza

BBC accused of silencing acts at Glastonbury for standing in solidarity with Palestine