Holy balls of wool! From pointless paintings to emotionless snapshots, the once-controversial award tiptoes too earnestly across the minefield of today’s culture wars.
During the latest in Howard Burton’s Masterpiece series, the art historian turns his low-tech but scholarly attention to Raphael’s interior decoration in the Vatican palace
As an Artist in Residence, a role created and supported by Passerelle and Documents d’artistes Bretagne, Marie Boyer (1997) is exhibiting a series of new works she has produced at Passerelle.
An owner of a pawn shop in Los Angeles was recently indicted for allegedly conspiring to sell a stolen Andy Warhol trial proof print of Vladimir Lenin and then lying about it to the FBI.
Launching this week (this Friday *early access) Remi Rough and Soi Books are releasing a collectible that aims to blur the line between book and artwork.
The Boston Public Art Triennial will display dozens of pieces downtown and in neighborhoods across the city, reflecting much-changed appetites for public art.
In her treatise on UK drill, the underground musical sub-genre that is believed to have originated in the neighborhoods and council estates of South London (specifically Brixton) in the early-to-mid 2010s, writer and artist Adèle Oliver pinpoints the cause of its vilification.
It’s interesting that two major institutions – Ghent’s S.M.A.K. in Europe and MCA Chicago in the US – recently planned exhibitions that took the supposed death of painting as a starting premise.