A new documentary about an artist’s decades-long dialogue with New York City government agencies premiered, at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this month, at the perfect time.
Thirty-five years ago, Alan LeQuire became Nashville’s most prominent sculptor with the unveiling of Athena Parthenos. Now, he has returned to the Parthenon with a new body of work that celebrates contemporary people.
This summer, the Newport Art Museum presents the first museum solo exhibition celebrating the groundbreaking work of Bobby Anspach, emphasizing the late artist’s unique ability to create a sense of connection and community through his immersive, sculptural installations.
Ancient buildings, sunny southern landscapes or local mountain worlds: travel has inspired numerous artists to create new perspectives and pictorial worlds.
The art historian Matthew Holman makes a personal selection from the finest collection of its type—celebrated for the breadth and depth of the story it tells of Western painting up to 1900.
The exhibition Strangers & Lovers at Galerie Francesca Pia brings together works by Markus Raetz (1941–2020), some of which have a long exhibition history while others are being shown publicly for the first time from the artist’s estate.
Read our pick of the best Paris art exhibitions to see in July, from a retrospective on photojournalist Marie-Laure de Decker at La MEP to Wolfgang Tillmans’ first show in over two decades at Centre Pompidou.
Entrée is proud to present a solo exhibition with Admir Batlak, coinciding with the annual Bergen International Festival. The exhibition features a new large-scale piece that continues Batlak’s investigation of textiles as both medium and message.