In an era dominated by digital immediacy and instant visual consumption, Taiwanese painter Nai-Jen Yang invites viewers to slow down and reconsider the fundamental act of seeing.
David Zwirner will open an exhibition of new work by Kenyan-British artist Michael Armitage, which inaugurates the gallery’s new Chelsea building at 533 West 19th Street.
Group of wood engravings and sketches will be sold at Cheffins this month, just before acclaimed retrospective of the artist's work closes at Dulwich Picture Gallery.
Alongside the Frieze fair, a growing cohort of satellite events and weeks of auctions attest to the resilience of the trade in a turbulent macroeconomic climate.
Observer caught up with the advisor ahead of a busy week of New York City art fairs to talk shifting strategies, lasting value and the lessons we can learn from the current market reset.
It seems that the philanthropic funds that enable shows like this are at the expense of art historical depth and integrity, perhaps even curators’ jobs.
Feeling, intuiting the swing, sway, and pressures of life, with all its tumult, its blare, its bounce, and its heave, were what really counted in modern poetry.