Asia Art Archive (AAA) presents a new exhibition for Hong Kong’s Art Month, In Our Own Backyard, that delves into the creative impulses and forms of gathering within the women’s movements in South Asia from the 1980s onwards.
Natalie Dunham received her BFA in painting from Birmingham-Southern College, in Birmingham, AL in 2007 and her MFA in sculpture from the Maryland Institute College of Art, in Baltimore, MD in 2010.
Robyn Kahukiwa, a Māori painter who became one of the most famous artists in Aotearoa New Zealand, died of an illness at 86 in a Wellington hospital on Friday.
Art Dubai opened to VIPs on Wednesday with all the familiar trappings of a global art fair—VIPs in sunglasses, polished presentations, branded lanyards, and an ocean of champagne.
Christie’s will auction Claude Monet‘s Peupliers au bord de l’Epte, crépuscule (1891) during its marquee evening sales in New York next month, where the painting will hit the block with a $30 million–$50 million estimate.
Sydney artist Andrew Tomkins has won the 2025 Gallipoli Art Prize, a $20,000 acquisitive prize sponsored by the Gallipoli Memorial Club in Sydney, with his work HMAS KARANGI, a potent symbol for peace in our present turbulent times.
The struggle was real and has proven successful. “Ceremony,” Grant’s latest solo show, brings together a hefty selection of recent large abstractions with a smaller roster of less recent canvases.
This article is part of The Visual Art of Creating Beyond the Apartheid Imagination program, funded by the National Arts Council in 2024 and implemented by Lukho Witbooi and Zimkitha Xwashu for Gallery Chosi.
The beloved author and illustrator’s art collection offers a peek into his diverse sources of enchantment — from William Blake to Mickey Mouse — coming to Christie’s in June.
Just as books hold knowledge, ancient mountains have their own stories to tell. For over two decades, interdisciplinary artist Guy Laramée has been exploring this concept with his ongoing Bookwork.